Complete Packaging Lines
A route for projects that need filling, capping, labelling, conveying and end-of-line coordination.
Solutions
Use these routes to move from a broad project idea into the right line structure, machine family and support path.
Reviewed by the Lancing UK technical team · Updated April 2026
Many buyers do not start with an exact machine model. They start with a product, a container or pouch, a desired output and a practical question about what the finished line needs to do.
This hub groups those questions into useful commercial routes so you can move from the brief into the right product category, application page, guide and support service without relying on a generic search result alone.
These are the main solution pages added in this pass to strengthen the commercial routes around the homepage and main hubs.
A route for projects that need filling, capping, labelling, conveying and end-of-line coordination.
A route for bottles, jars and similar packs where liquid behaviour drives the machine choice.
A route for dry products where weighing, dosing, dust control and sealing need careful planning.
A bottle-led route covering handling, filling, capping, labelling and container-closing steps.
A jar-led route for sauces, pastes, creams, powders and similar products.
A pouch route for premade pouches, bagging, sealing and downstream handling.
A route for adding one machine, replacing a bottleneck or improving an existing packaging line.
A route for changeover-heavy, multi-SKU projects where flexibility matters as much as output.
Useful where the project is wider than one machine and the line still needs shape.
The strongest machinery shortlists normally come from clearer information about product behaviour, pack format, closure type, target speed, cleaning needs, utilities and future growth. That applies whether you are buying a single machine or planning a wider line.
The pages in this hub are designed to make those early decisions easier by connecting the brief to the right application routes, guide content and technical support pages.
Use these pages to move from this page into the next planning, product or support route.
Browse the main machine families and categories.
Move from the machine family into bottle, jar, pouch and other practical routes.
Browse routes for food, cosmetics, chemicals, pharmaceuticals and more.
Use planning and buying guides to improve the shortlist.
See the installation, integration, maintenance and spares routes around the machinery.
Useful when the project is wider than one machine or category page.
Short answers for visitors comparing options or planning the next project step.
It depends on the stage of the project. A solutions page is usually more helpful when several machine families are involved or when the brief is still being defined.
No. They are designed to support the catalogue by helping buyers narrow down the most relevant categories, applications and support routes first.
Yes. Many projects start with the product, pack, output and site constraints rather than with a final machine model.
Commercial planning
These guides help complete-line, retrofit and integration buyers move from broad solution research into budget, timing and supplier comparison.
Budget for the full route instead of comparing headline machine prices alone.
See what affects timing from first brief through FAT, delivery and commissioning.
Check scope, assumptions, exclusions and support before you choose.
See the route from brief and shortlist through FAT, installation and handover.
Use product behaviour, pack format, fill accuracy and output to shortlist the right filling route.
Compare closure type, torque control, cap feed and changeover needs before you shortlist.