Line layout planning
Arrange equipment around operator access, product flow and available floor space.
Packaging line machinery
Bottle production lines need machinery that works together: container handling, filling, cap sorting, capping, labelling, coding, accumulation and operator access all matter.
Bottle packaging line integration
A packaging line machinery project should start with the production target, bottle format and closure. From there, the line can be laid out to remove bottlenecks and reduce manual handling.
Arrange equipment around operator access, product flow and available floor space.
Coordinate filling, capping, conveyors, labelling, coding and accumulation.
Improve an existing manual or semi-automatic process in manageable stages.
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
Production line layouts from empty bottle to coded, capped pack.
Bottle machinery
Cap sorting and feeding as part of line performance.
Bottle machinery
Cappers specified around the wider packaging process.
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 |
|---|---|---|
| Line objective | The goal may be output, labour reduction, consistency or space saving. | Current process, target speed and business reason. |
| Bottle formats | Container sizes and shapes determine guidework and changeover needs. | Bottle list, drawings and samples. |
| Machine sequence | Filling, capping, labelling and coding must be ordered and spaced correctly. | Line sketch, available floor area and utilities. |
| Future expansion | A line can be specified with space and control options for later upgrades. | Expected growth and future SKUs. |
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
It can include conveyors, filling, cap sorting, capping, labelling, coding, accumulation and packing support.
Yes. Existing fillers, conveyors or labelers can often be reviewed before adding new capping or handling equipment.
Capping performance depends on bottle spacing, cap feeding, conveyor control and downstream flow.
Send a line layout, photos or video, bottle and cap samples, output target and available services.
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.