Symptoms first
For capping machine rejects, separate cap feed faults, bottle control faults, torque faults and closure quality problems before adjustment.
Fault-finding route
Capping machine rejects guide for loose caps, missing caps, skewed caps, high caps and inspection station setup.
Fault-finding route
Troubleshooting searches from production teams trying to reduce rejects, downtime and inconsistent cap quality.
For capping machine rejects, separate cap feed faults, bottle control faults, torque faults and closure quality problems before adjustment.
Check whether the issue began after a cap batch change, bottle supplier change, speed increase, cleaning or tooling changeover.
Record torque values, reject counts, cap height, leak failures and the exact formats affected so the fault is visible.
Change one setting at a time and confirm whether tooling wear, sensor timing or cap presentation is the real cause.
Troubleshooting checks
Use these checks to turn a search query into a practical bottle capping machine enquiry that can be quoted, tested and installed with fewer assumptions.
| Area | What to confirm |
|---|---|
| Affected formats | Record the bottle size, cap size, cap supplier and line speed when the fault appears. |
| Cap feed path | Check bowl, elevator, chute, pick-off, sensors and whether caps arrive square and correctly oriented. |
| Bottle control | Check side grip, guide rails, starwheel, conveyor speed and whether bottles twist or lift during capping. |
| Tooling condition | Inspect chuck inserts, gripper wheels, belts, heads, springs and worn contact parts. |
| Quality proof | Use torque readings, leak checks, cap-height checks and photos of rejects to confirm the fix. |
Practical buying notes
Operators, engineers and production managers with a live capping problem or a recurring quality issue. The most useful enquiry gives the supplier enough detail to test the pack, choose the correct head, decide whether cap feeding is practical and plan the surrounding bottle machinery.
Real bottle and closure samples are more useful than photographs alone because cap grip, thread start, sealing face and bottle stability can be tested.
Agree the target speed, acceptable reject rate, cap torque, cap height, leak checks and any visual finish standards before machine selection.
Review filling, conveying, capping, labelling, coding and packing together so improvements at the capper do not create another bottleneck.
Related pages
Use these related pages to move from a broad search to a clearer capper, cap feeder or bottle machinery enquiry.
Troubleshooting pages for cap torque, jams and rejects.
View pageFind likely causes before changing machinery settings.
View pageCheck tightening, removal torque and finished-pack control.
View pageSend photos, samples and symptoms for practical advice.
View pageFAQ
Answers to common questions about bottle capping machinery selection, testing and integration.
Common causes include poor cap presentation, worn tooling, unstable bottle handling, unsuitable torque settings, cap batch variation or a line speed that is too high for the closure.
Not always. Torque changes can hide the real problem if the bottle is slipping, caps are skewed, tooling is worn or the cap feeder is presenting closures badly.
Send photos or video of the fault, sample rejects, the bottle and cap specification, current output, recent changes and any torque or leak-test data.
Often yes. Tooling, guides, cap feed, side grip, sensors and changeover settings can sometimes be corrected before a replacement machine is required.
Send bottle photos, cap samples, target speed and line details so the right capping machine, cap feeder or complete bottle machinery route can be reviewed.