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Blow molder's bottle handling goes turnkey

As more distillery customers wanted bottles packed in reshippers, Captive Plastics installed a turnkey system that erects cases, loads partitions, and inverts freshly blown bottles.

12 bottles are gripped mechanically by their necks and rotated 180?
12 bottles are gripped mechanically by their necks and rotated 180?

The Louisville, KY, plant of blow molder Captive Plastics has long relied on semi-automatic case packing to put its bottles of polyethylene terephthalate into reshipper cases. It was slow, labor intensive, and inefficient, says Tony Springate, plant manager. This became a real obstacle as more distillery customers began to request that Captive supply bottles packed upside-down in corrugated reshippers.

So early last year, the blow molder had a turnkey line installed by Wepackit (Orangeville, Ontario, Canada) that automatically carries freshly molded bottles from blow-molding equipment and loads them top down into bottom-sealed corrugated cases that are automatically erected and loaded with fiber partitions. The output of the new packer has won kudos, Springate reports. Key customers, like Bardstown, KY-based Heaven Hill, back him up.

“We haven’t had any problems with the cases of empty bottles we receive,” says David Hobbs, Heaven Hill plant manager. “Captive supplies our 750-mL bottle, which we call the ‘carry pack,’ and they supply most of our closures, too.”

Heaven Hill fills the 750-mL bottle with its own-brand spirits or with gin or vodka under the Burnett brand. “Captive sends the bottles in preprinted cases for several of our brands, and some others are packed into unprinted, generic cases that we label ourselves.”

Saving manpower

Before the Wepackit equipment was installed, only case erecting was done automatically. “We had to have two and sometimes three people manually loading the cases that had been automatically set up,” Springate reports. “It certainly wasn’t a very efficient process for us.

In addition, more and more distillers prefer to receive plastic bottles inverted in reshippers, he says. “It’s a definite trend. After all, inverted bottles in reshippers is how most of them receive their glass bottles, too,” he points out. “By packing plastic bottles the same way, it’s easy for the distillers to convert their filling lines from glass to plastic and back again.”

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