• An eight-head, inline piston filler from Kugler that fills bottles with 1/2 oz to 16 oz of liquid. “We purchased it after we initially saw it at the Interphex show last year,” reports Loyd Bowman, Pharma Fab’s director of facilities and equipment.
• A six-head Kaps-All A6 spindle capper applies a screw cap, some of which are child-resistant.
• Plastic bottles are conveyed through an AutoMate AM-250 “Smart Seal” induction sealer that Bowman says is equipped with a controller so that it can check for things such as missing foil, a raised cap, a stalled bottle, and determine if heating temperatures are accurate.
• Next, bottles proceed to a “surge” table that allows for accumulation so that the induction-sealed bottles are cooled before a Kaps-All retorquer FA6 tightens the caps to the bottles.
• A Quadrel Versaline labeling system applies a wraparound pressure-sensitive label to the bottle. Labels are coded on the web with a lot number and expiration date via a Videojet thermal-transfer coder.
• In some applications, a Creative Automation machine is employed to apply a drop of hot melt glue on top of the bottle cap. An operator then places a prefolded instructional insert onto the glue to hold it in place.
• Bottles are manually loaded into a carton or case from a custom-built conveyor system from Modular Packaging. The system incorporates four workstations to accommodate packers. Following case packing, palletizing, and stretch wrapping, pallets are stored in a controlled warehouse prior to shipment.
Modular Packaging Systems, Inc.
Kaps-All Packaging Systems, Inc.