Coordinated line design
Plan filling, capping, labelling and coding around the same bottle flow.
Filling and capping
Filling and capping work best when specified together. Bottle control, fill accuracy, cap feeding, capping torque and line layout all affect output and reliability.
Fill-to-close machinery for bottle lines
A complete liquid filling and capping project looks at product characteristics, container handling, filling method, cap presentation and the layout of conveyors, labelling and coding equipment.
Plan filling, capping, labelling and coding around the same bottle flow.
Viscosity, foaming, cleaning and product risk affect the filling and capping route.
A planned fill-to-close line cuts manual handling and improves output consistency.
Machine options
Use the cap, bottle, product and output target to decide whether the project needs a compact capper, an inline machine, a cap feeder or a complete production line.
Bottle machinery
Integrated bottle machinery from filling through final closure.
Bottle machinery
Closure handling matched to automatic or semi-automatic capping.
Bottle machinery
Screw, pump, trigger or ROPP capping matched to the line.
Buying checks
Good bottle machinery selection depends on samples, output target, cap behaviour, bottle control and the way the machine will fit the production room.
| Check | Why it matters | Details to send |
|---|---|---|
| Fill product | Viscosity, foaming and product handling affect machine choice and speed. | Product type, viscosity and cleaning requirements. |
| Bottle and cap | The container and closure decide the handling method after filling. | Samples or drawings of bottles and caps. |
| Target output | Line speed drives filling heads, capping automation and conveyor design. | Bottles per minute, shift pattern and batch size. |
| Downstream equipment | Labels, coders and packing stations must receive bottles in a controlled way. | Line layout and downstream machinery details. |
More bottle capper pages
These linked pages give additional bottle capping machine and bottle machinery routes for comparison.
Inline cappers for higher output lines with cap feeding, conveyor control and repeatable tightening.
View pageBench and floor standing cappers for batch work, sampling rooms and controlled manual loading.
View pageChuck-head tightening for threaded caps where grip, cap profile and torque consistency matter.
View pageMachines for tightening screw caps, rework, batch production and improving closure repeatability.
View pageBottle cappers specified around torque range, cap material, thread engagement and bottle stability.
View pageCappers for ROPP, tamper bands, pilfer-proof closures and controlled seal presentation.
View pageCappers for lotion pumps, sprays, trigger closures, flip tops and personal care containers.
View pageBottle capping lines for household, industrial and chemical products with robust cap handling.
View pageCapping machinery for oils, sauces, drinks, glass bottles, plastic bottles and closures.
View pageHealthcare and technical bottle capping with repeatability, hygiene and line integration in mind.
View pageFAQs
Yes. The project can cover filling, cap feeding, capping, labelling, coding and conveyors.
Both should be reviewed together because fill level, bottle control and capping method affect each other.
Usually it can be reviewed if conveyor height, spacing and controls are compatible.
Send product, bottle, cap, target speed, layout, power and air supply information.
Send bottle and cap details, line speed target and photographs of the current production area. Lancing can advise on the most suitable bottle capping machine, cap feeder or complete line route.