Packaging machines are all those machines that companies need in order to pack any type of product on an industrial level. Packaging machines are present in many sectors and vary... according to the type of product that will have to be packaged. We find, therefore, these machines in sectors such as: pharmaceutical, cosmetic, nutraceutical, food, beverage, gifts, publishing, components and many more. Packaging machinery varies according to the nature of the product to be packaged, according to whether it is liquid, creamy/semi-solid or solid. Again, the type of machinery used in packaging varies depending on whether the packaging is primary, secondary or tertiary. We speak of primary packaging when the product is packaged in its initial state, such as, for example, an orange juice (in its liquid form) when it is filled inside the bottle. By secondary packaging we mean all those packaging processes that take place immediately after the product (in its initial state) has already been packaged in a main container, such as, for example, the labelling phase of our previously bottled orange bottle. Finally, with tertiary packaging we refer to all the automatic and semi-automatic processes of handling and logistics of fully packaged products and ready for transport, an example could be the palletiser that moves the platforms full of bundles of 6 bottles of our orange juice inside the storage warehouse of the manufacturer.
Packaging machines are all those machines that companies need in order to pack any type of product on an industrial level. Packaging machines are present in many sectors and vary according to the type of product that will have to be packaged. We find, therefore, these machines in sectors such as: pharmaceutical, cosmetic, nutraceutical, food, beverage, gifts, publishing, components and... many more. Packaging machinery varies according to the nature of the product to be packaged, according to whether it is liquid, creamy/semi-solid or solid. Again, the type of machinery used in packaging varies depending on whether the packaging is primary, secondary or tertiary. We speak of primary packaging when the product is packaged in its initial state, such as, for example, an orange juice (in its liquid form) when it is filled inside the bottle. By secondary packaging we mean all those packaging processes that take place immediately after the product (in its initial state) has already been packaged in a main container, such as, for example, the labelling phase of our previously bottled orange bottle. Finally, with tertiary packaging we refer to all the automatic and semi-automatic processes of handling and logistics of fully packaged products and ready for transport, an example could be the palletiser that moves the platforms full of bundles of 6 bottles of our orange juice inside the storage warehouse of the manufacturer.
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