Best fit
Hygiene products, gels and liquids packaged in plastic bottles with varied closures.
Sanitiser capping
Hand sanitiser bottles may use screw caps, flip caps, pumps or trigger sprayers. The capper must be matched to closure style, bottle stability and the way filled bottles move through the line.
Search intent
This page is written for buyers comparing caps, bottle handling, cap feeding, torque or seal control and the wider machinery route before requesting a practical quotation.
Hygiene products, gels and liquids packaged in plastic bottles with varied closures.
Pumps and triggers often need more handling than simple screw caps because tubes can catch, bend or need orientation.
Send the closure type, bottle material, fill volume, target speed and whether filling, capping and labelling should be reviewed together.
Related equipment
Most capping projects have more than one possible machine route. These related pages help narrow the specification before samples are reviewed.
Related equipment
Capping machinery for pump closures, trigger sprayers, tubes and difficult cap orientation.
Related equipment
Pump cap equipment for personal care, cosmetics and products with dip tubes.
Related equipment
Trigger sprayer cappers for spray bottles where tube control and orientation matter.
Specification checklist
Clear information helps avoid the wrong capper, the wrong cap feeder or a line layout that cannot reach the intended output.
| Area | What to check |
|---|---|
| Bottle and cap samples | Confirm real production bottles, caps, neck finish, cap liner or band details and any variation between suppliers. |
| Output target | Confirm current and target bottles per minute, shift pattern, batch sizes and how often changeovers are expected. |
| Line integration | Check whether the capper is standalone or part of filling, conveying, labelling, coding and packing. |
| Operator method | Review cap placement, bottle loading, change parts, cleaning access, training and daily quality checks. |
Useful answers
These answers help production teams prepare a clearer enquiry before machine selection, sample testing or quotation.
Start with the closure and bottle. Check how the cap is applied, how the bottle is held, the target output and whether the line needs automatic or semi-automatic handling. Real samples are the best way to confirm suitability.
Send the closure type, bottle material, fill volume, target speed and whether filling, capping and labelling should be reviewed together.
Yes. The capping stage can be reviewed with filling, conveyors, labelling, coding, accumulation and operator access so the full line works as one production process.
Common causes include poor cap engagement, unstable bottles, unsuitable torque settings, caps that feed inconsistently, incorrect change parts, worn tooling or a mismatch between the capper and the closure style.
Send bottle photos, closure samples, target speed and line details so the right capping machine, cap feeder or complete bottle machinery route can be reviewed.