Packing System

Our packing system solutions integrate advanced automated packaging machines into fully coordinated production lines to handle a wide range of products - from powders, granules and liquids to solids and consumer goods - across the food & beverage, pharmaceutical, chemical and daily products industries. Including Packing Line (VFFS) for vertical form-fill-seal operations, Filling Capping (Labeling) Line for bottles and jars, Sachet/Stick Packaging Line for small format sachets and sticks, Automatic Feeding Packing Line for efficient bulk packaging, and Tube Filling Packing Line for creams and pastes, our systems support versatile formats such as pillow bags, premade pouches, sachets, sticks, bottles, cans and jars. Designed to optimize workflow from product dosing and film forming to filling, sealing, labeling, cartoning and palletizing, our packing systems help manufacturers improve throughput, reduce labor costs and achieve consistent, high-quality packaging performance on all scales of production.

4 products
Granule Bagging Cartoning Palletising System | Automatic Horizontal Pouch Packing System
$166,888.00
Sale
Full Automatic Pouch Boxing Cartoning Packing System
Sale price $14,999.00 Regular price $18,500.00 Save $3,501
Automatic Jar Can Tin Filling Sealing Capping Machine Line Packing System
$11,053.00
Automatic Container Filling Line Cartoning Boxing Palletizing Packaging System
$2,950.00

A packing system is not a single machine.

As a professional packaging machine manufacturer, we design packing systems that work as one continuous process instead of disconnected equipment. A well-designed packing system solves this by aligning speed, timing, and material flow across the entire line - from feeding to final packing.

What a Packing System Actually Does

A packing system connects multiple packing machines and automated packaging machines into a single, stable workflow. Each unit knows its role and keeps pace with the rest of the line.

Products enter the system as loose items, liquids, powders, or containers. They leave as sealed, labeled, and organized packages - ready for storage, shipping, or retail.

This approach reduces manual handling, shortens production cycles, and keeps output consistent even at high speed.

Packing Line Configurations

Different products require different system logic. A packing system adapts to the product, not the other way around.

Packing Line (VFFS)

Designed for continuous packaging using roll film, this system forms, fills, and seals pillow bags in one flow. It suits granules, powders, snacks, and free-flowing products that demand speed and efficiency.

Filling Capping & Labeling Line

Built for bottles, cans, and jars, this line handles filling, capping, and labeling in sequence. It keeps container positioning stable and ensures every unit leaves the line clean, sealed, and clearly identified.

Sachet / Stick Packaging Line

This system focuses on compact packaging formats such as sachets and sticks. Multi-lane operation boosts output while maintaining accurate dosing and clean seals, even for small-volume packs.

Automatic Feeding Packing Line

When products lack uniform shape or orientation, automatic feeding systems organize and deliver them steadily into the packaging stage. This line improves efficiency while reducing manual intervention.

Tube Filling Packing Line

Designed for creams, gels, and pastes, this system fills, seals, and codes tubes in a smooth, controlled sequence, keeping product appearance consistent.

Supported Package Formats

A single packing system can handle multiple packaging styles depending on configuration:

  1. Pillow bags, back sealing bags
  2. Premade pouches
  3. Sachets and sticks
  4. Bottles, cans, and jars

This flexibility allows manufacturers to expand product lines without rebuilding the entire factory layout.

Why a System Approach Matters

Standalone machines solve isolated tasks. A packing system solves production flow.

By treating packaging as a connected process, manufacturers gain:

  1. Stable output without bottlenecks
  2. Fewer operator adjustments during production
  3. Better consistency across different package types
  4. Easier expansion as demand grows

This is where automated packaging machines deliver their real value - not through speed alone, but through coordination.

Designed Around Your Production Reality

No two factories run the same way. A packing system starts with understanding product behavior, package format, and daily output targets. From there, machines, conveyors, and control logic align to support real production - not theoretical capacity.

our team

Our Team

our factory

Our Factory

our client

Our Client

our exhibition

Our Exhibition