Extrusion blow variety
Bekum plans to demonstrate a new multi-cavity extrusion blow
process, called tandem extrusion blow molding, on its BM-206
shuttle machine. Tandem blowing reportedly doubles the productivity
of a standard machine by blowing two rows of bottles—one
from the top and one from the bottom—simultaneously.
Bekum developed this process for single-serve 100- to 300-cc
bottles for milk-based beverages, sports drinks, and juices.
Meanwhile,
the ranks of all-electric machine suppliers slowly expands, as
Plastimac SpA of Italy (represented here by American Jet Stream)
will launch single- and double-station electric shuttles that
deliver low energy consumption and are oil-free. The PB1/S has
two cavities, clamp force of 3.5 tons, and a 50-mm extruder.
It is targeted for 1-liter cosmetic bottles. The PB5/D is a double-station
electric unit with six cavities, 80-mm extruder, and clamp
force of 10 tons. It’s aimed at 5L detergent and oil containers
and has an output of 2400 bottles/hr.
|
| Sipa’s new, highly flexible SFR 9/27
reheat stretch-blow machine makes PET bottles from 0.6 to 3 liters. |
A new shuttle machine, described
as “value-packed” with lots of
features at no price premium, will be introduced by Uniloy
Milacron. Model UMS 16D boasts an exceptionally small footprint,
tiebarless accessibility to the mold area, in-machine trimming,
and closed-loop position and speed control. It can handle two
to six parisons in single- or dual-station configurations. Clamp
movement is strictly horizontal, so the machine can accommodate
a bobbing extruder. This model was designed to accept existing
molds built for almost any other machine—no other machine
is so adaptable, Milacron claims.
Graham Machinery Group will
focus on reciprocating-screw technology and will introduce a
proportionally controlled, high-speed hydraulic clamping system
for high-cavitation molding of gallon dairy containers. Graham
will show a cutaway of an air-cooled reciprocating extruder,
a standard feature on its newer machines.
Graham will also highlight
its latest high-throughput extrusion heads for polycarbonate
water bottle production and other applications on its Hesta-Graham
linear shuttle machines.
New from Jomar is a version of its EBM
6.0 extrusion blow machine with a 90-mm extruder and longer stroke
(685 mm). The dual-station model EBM 6.0-D-L/S will run two eight-cavity
molds for 300-cc Boston round HDPE cosmetic containers on a 12-sec
cycle, producing 4800 bottles/hr.
The latest wheel machine from
Wilmington Machinery is the Series III, a large-platen unit with
30 stations and up to 60 cavities (with dual parisons). It combines
six-layer coextrusion, energy-saving electromechanical clamp
system, and improved bottle handling to boost throughput. Wilmington
says mold changes are fast and simple and positioning of the
molds to minimize flash and scrap is made effortless with the
company’s “radial positioning” feature.
The Series III is offered in sizes for single-serve juice and
dairy containers and in larger models for 5L and 6L containers.
Output can range from a few thousand to over 20,000 bottles/hr.
Another
new wheel system comes from Urola S.C. of Spain, which just recently
opened its first U.S. office. At K 2004, the company will introduce
a 20-station wheel designed to compete with large rotary-machine
makers like Graham Machinery and Wilmington, says Urola USA general
manager Lou Maiero. Previously, Urola primarily served the European
market with smaller rotary machines of up to 14 stations.
|
| Uniloy Milacron’s new shuttle machine,
the UMS 16D, offers tiebarless accessiblilty to the mold area
plus in-machine trimming and closed-loop position and speed control. |
The
new M20 rotary consists of two 10-station wheels with a common
center plate and two extruders. The two streams of bottles pass
through a common trimmer. Maiero says this side-by-side wheel
design is the first on the market and costs less, uses less energy,
and occupies less floor space than bigger competing wheel machines.
It is targeted for HDPE containers for chemical, dairy, and food
applications.
Versatile PET units
Although PET machinery was a major focus of new developments
at the last K show, most suppliers did not release information
on new models in advance of the show. An exception was SIPA of
Italy, which claims to set a new standard for flexibility in
PET bottle production with its SFR 9/27 rotary reheat machine.
The unit’s nine blowing stations can mount three-cavity
molds for single-serve bottles or single-cavity molds for family-size
containers. The machine puts out 40,000 bottles/hr at 0.6 liters
and 15,000/hr for a 3L size.
Also notable about the SFR 9/27 are
its small footprint (one-half to one-third that of competing
machines), its simple mechanical set-up, and a preform heating
and stabilizing system that reportedly allows a wide processing
window.
In addition, Automa of Italy will unveil a one-stage injection
stretch-blow molder for wide-mouth PET containers. Model NSB
140 has a 140-ton injection clamp, up to 14 cavities, and an
electric-powered injection unit. Dry-cycle time is said to be
just 3 sec.
Injection-blow targets PET
At least two injection-blow molding exhibits will emphasize
production of unoriented PET bottles. Novapax of Germany will
show a new four-station machine for high production of PET containers.
The NSB 850/400, with a 93-ton preform clamp, is said to compete
with larger three-station machines by accommodating a 35.4-in.
transfer head to run high-cavitation molds. It runs 60-cc wide-mouth
tablet bottles in 17 cavities and 200-cc wide-mouth bottles
in 12 cavities. The unit comes with a Siemens Siemotion touchscreen
control system, a new rapid indexing unit, and an electric screw
drive for precise plasticating control when handling sensitive
resins. Novapax says the NSB 850 can also run existing molds
for three-station injection-blow machines, requiring only additional
core rods, interchange parts, and minor mold adjustments for
fit.
Jomar Corp. is introducing two high-production injection-blow
units. The M-40 model with 38-ton preform clamp will run a six-cavity
mold at the show, producing 10-cc oval PET bottles for cosmetics
or hotel amenities. The machine boasts a 10-sec cycle and produces
2160 bottles/hr. Jomar said many of its late-model injection-blow
machines can be modified to produce small PET bottles up to 150
cc.
Jomar’s new M-85-S (72 tons) will be shown running a
10-cavity mold producing 100-cc HDPE pharmaceutical containers.
The machine runs a 11.5-sec cycle, producing 3130 bottles/hr.
It can run bottles from 5 cc to 1L.