Line integration

Capping machine line integration

A capping machine rarely works in isolation on a production line. Filling accuracy, conveyor control, cap feeding, labelling and outfeed handling all affect final performance.

Upstream filling affects capping

Overfilled bottles, product on the neck or unstable containers can create capping problems. The filling stage should be considered when diagnosing cap torque or thread issues.

Conveyor and spacing

Bottle spacing, guide rails and conveyor speed need to be compatible with the capping station and downstream labelling or packing equipment.

Plan the whole route

A strong project brief covers the complete path from bottle infeed through filling, capping, labelling and outfeed.

Shortlist route

How to compare the options

Use this table to narrow the likely capping machine route before sending samples and output targets.

RequirementLikely routeWhy it matters
Filling before cappingCheck fill level and neck cleanlinessPrevents torque and seating issues.
Capping stationMatch speed and bottle spacingSupports repeatable tightening.
Labelling after cappingAvoid bottlenecks downstreamKeeps the line balanced.

FAQ

Questions buyers ask

Can a capper be added to an existing line?

Often yes, if space, conveyor height and line control are compatible.

What causes capping line bottlenecks?

Poor cap feed, bottle instability, changeovers and downstream restrictions.

Should I plan labelling at the same time?

Yes, because line speed and bottle control must work across all stages.

Related pages

Continue the shortlist.

These related pages help compare spindle cappers, screw cappers, cap feeding systems and project pricing.

Ready to shortlist?

Send the bottle, cap and target output.

Lancing UK can review samples, speed, cap feed and line layout before recommending a capping route.

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