Key factors
Product stability, transfer points, incline angle, accumulation requirement and the interfaces to neighbouring machines.
Products
Browse conveyor and accumulation systems for line linking, infeed, outfeed, accumulation, orientation and pack transfer. We help buyers match the right conveyor layout to the product, space and machine interfaces on the line.
Choose a sub-category to view machines.
Browse conveyor and accumulation systems from Lancing UK, including belt, slatted, curved, incline and infeed conveyors for packaging lines.
Conveyors are often the part of the line that decides whether production flows smoothly or keeps stalling at transfer points. Product stability, pack spacing, incline changes, accumulation demand and machine-to-machine timing all matter when selecting the right conveyor solution.
This category includes belt conveyors, slatted conveyors, curved conveyors, incline conveyors and infeed systems used to connect packaging machinery into a working line. The best option depends on the shape and stability of the container or pack, the footprint available on site and the upstream and downstream equipment it must connect to.
Lancing UK can help scope conveyor systems that do more than move product from one point to another. The goal is consistent transfer, practical changeovers, good operator access and stable line performance under real production conditions.
Product stability, transfer points, incline angle, accumulation requirement and the interfaces to neighbouring machines.
They connect filling, capping, labelling, coding, inspection and end-of-line equipment into a practical production flow.
Layout planning, integration advice and wider line specification are available from Lancing UK.
These are some of the questions buyers normally ask when comparing options in this category.
Start with the product or container, then review stability, spacing, elevation changes, footprint and integration points with other machinery.
Accumulation is often useful where machines run at slightly different speeds or where short interruptions should not stop the whole line.
Yes. Conveyor systems are often specified alongside fillers, cappers, labellers and end-of-line equipment.
Applications & planning
Use these pages to move from the machine family into the relevant application, planning guide or service route.
Conveyors and accumulation work best when planned around the whole line.
Bottle routes where conveyor flow and transfers affect uptime.
Larger-container routes where handling and operator access matter.
Support for evaluating conveyor and transfer points across the route.
Compare the main machine families before you commit to a narrower route.
Move from general research into a stronger shortlist and enquiry.