The Bottles Cans Tins Packing System handles bottled, canned, tinned, and jarred products from filling to final case packing. The line can include bottle or can feeding, filling, capping or seaming, labeling, carton or case packing, case sealing, and palletizing. It suits sauces, powders, granules, beverages, condiments, chemicals, and other products packed in rigid containers. Food, beverage, pharmaceutical, cosmetic, and daily chemical factories use this system when they need one connected line for filling, labeling, packing, and end-of-line handling.
Bottles Cans Tins Packing System
A Bottles Cans Tins Packing System connects every stage after containers enter the production line. Empty bottles, cans, or tins move through filling, capping, labeling, cartoning, case packing, and palletizing before leaving the factory as finished products.
Different products require different line layouts. A beverage line, a powder filling line, and a chemical packaging line may use the same production logic while changing the filling equipment, container handling, or packing sequence.
The goal is not to combine as many machines as possible, but to keep products moving from one station to the next without unnecessary stops or manual transfer.
From Empty Containers to Shipping Pallets
Every line starts with container preparation.
Bottles, cans, or tins enter the conveyor and move toward the filling machine or complete filling line. Once filling finishes, the containers pass through capping and labeling before entering the secondary packaging stage.
Depending on production requirements, finished containers may go directly into cartons or load into shipping cases before palletizing.
Equipment Inside the System
Filling Machine
The filling machine measures product volume or weight and fills bottles, cans, or tins according to the selected recipe. Different filling technologies support liquids, powders, granules, and viscous products.
Filling Line
A filling line combines container feeding, filling, capping, labeling, inspection, and conveying into one continuous process. The layout changes according to the container type and production capacity.
Cartoning Machines
Some products require retail cartons before shipping. Cartoning machines place filled containers into folding cartons while keeping the product arrangement consistent.
Case Packing Systems
Case packing systems group cartons or containers and load them into corrugated shipping cases according to a preset packing pattern.
Case Erectors
Case erectors prepare shipping cartons by forming corrugated blanks before loading begins.
Case Sealers
Case sealers close loaded cartons using tape or hot melt glue before products move to palletizing.
Palletizing Equipment
Palletizers arrange finished cases into stable pallet loads ready for storage or transport.
Containers the System Supports
The line can package many container styles, including:
- Plastic bottles
- Glass bottles
- Aluminum cans
- Tin cans
- Metal tins
- Composite containers
- Round, square, and custom-shaped containers
Different handling systems match different container dimensions and stability requirements.
Built Around the Product
No single production layout fits every factory.
Cooking oil, milk powder, coffee, protein powder, beverages, sauces, chemicals, and personal care products all require different filling methods and downstream packaging.
The production line starts with the product, then matches the filling equipment, container handling, and end-of-line machinery to fit the application.
Complete Bottle, Can and Tin Packaging Lines
A complete bottle packing system, can packing system, or tin packing system may include container unscrambling, filling, capping, labeling, coding, inspection, cartoning, case packing, sealing, and palletizing.
Manufacturers can install the entire line at one time or expand it step by step as production grows.
FAQ
1. What products can run on a bottles cans tins packing system?
The system handles beverages, edible oils, sauces, powders, granules, coffee, dairy products, chemicals, cosmetics, and many other products packed in bottles, cans, or tins.
2. Can one production line handle different container sizes?
Yes. Most lines support change parts for different bottle, can, or tin dimensions. Changeover depends on the container design and production requirements.
3. What equipment forms a complete bottle packing system?
A complete line usually includes a filling machine, capping equipment, labeling machine, conveyors, cartoning machines, case packing systems, case sealers, and palletizing equipment.
4. Can the system connect with existing filling equipment?
Yes. Many manufacturers add cartoning, case packing, or palletizing equipment to an existing filling line without replacing the entire production system.