Product residue around the neck
Oil or lubricant on the thread or closure can affect torque and cap seating. Filling accuracy and neck cleanliness may be just as important as the capper itself.
Application guide
Oils and lubricants can create capping challenges because product residue, bottle weight and closure style all affect repeatability. The machine route should be checked against real samples.
Oil or lubricant on the thread or closure can affect torque and cap seating. Filling accuracy and neck cleanliness may be just as important as the capper itself.
Projects may include round bottles, handled containers or larger packs. Bottle shape and fill weight affect whether a standard side-belt spindle capper is suitable.
If output is sustained, cap feeding and conveyor integration may become important. Smaller batches may suit a semi-automatic capper.
Shortlist route
Use this table to narrow the likely capping machine route before sending samples and output targets.
| Requirement | Likely route | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Round oil bottles | Inline spindle capper | Useful where bottle handling is stable. |
| Small batch lubricants | Semi-automatic screw capper | Flexible route for lower-volume production. |
| Multiple cap sizes | Changeover review | Check tooling, guides and torque settings. |
FAQ
Yes. Residue can affect thread engagement and final torque.
They may need project-specific handling rather than a standard bottle capper.
Send filled bottles, caps and details of output and line layout.
Related pages
These related pages help compare spindle cappers, screw cappers, cap feeding systems and project pricing.
Ready to shortlist?
Lancing UK can review samples, speed, cap feed and line layout before recommending a capping route.