What is a Stick Pack Single Track Machine and How Does it Actually Work?

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What is a Stick Pack Single Track Machine and How Does it Actually Work
Stick pack Single Track Packaging Machines are most commonly used for packing powder, granule or liquid into a centre seal pouch. There is only one track for the product to enter the packaging line, hence the name, single-track machine.

Stick packaging refers to a long and narrow pouch that resembles a stick in looks, that became popular when CPG companies learned how easy it was to open and pour a powder mix into a bottle of water. In India, you will find such packaging for sugar, salt, medicinal powders, powder soaps, dehydrated juice mixes, chocolates, honey etc.

Since the genesis of the Crystal Light stick pack into beverages, there have been many similar versions available on the market in both length, width and fill weight which all run on fully automatic stick pack machines. Single track or Multi Track stick packaging machines are of specific vertical form, fill and seal machines with specific widths that are predefined in the machine that will form the “stick pack”.

There is a shift in paradigm On a global scale in the packaging industry, as the demand for flexible packaging solutions is acquiring momentum. This shift in the trend is likely to shape the future of stick packaging and contribute to the growth curve. For start ups, stick pack single track machines are economical options, the demand for this form of packaging is increasing and the preference for economical packaging solutions will just contribute more towards it.

Here is a step by step process of how Stick Pack Machines work


Film Transport & Unwind:

Full automatic machine use a single sheet of packaging film material which is referred to as rollstock which is wrapped around its core. The film is unwound from the film reel and positioned at the rear part of the machine. One web free roller table guides the packing roll till the folding collar of the machine where it folds in tubular shape. Print mark sensor and online batch printer is fixed in this travel length only. The movement of the cross seal jaws, located at the front of the stick pack machine, which decided pouch length facilitates this film unwinding process.

Optional Printing:

If the machine is equipped with a date-stamping device that engraves the date or any other relevant details on the packaging, then the film is fed around a registration roller. This helps to register the position of the date stamp on the package in relation to the horizontal seal of the product package. The printmark on the film is used to decide the position of printing on the film. You can use friction coder, TTC type coder, Thermal inkjet or continuous inkjet printer are used for this online batch coding.

Film Tension:

After Film transporting, unwinding and printing, the film is fed through a set of nip rollers. The nip/free rollers help to keep the film at a constant tension by providing even pressure on the film, thus keeping the dancer’s arm in the proper operating position.

During the process of unwinding, the film is unwound from the roll and passes over a dancer’s arm. The dancer’s arm is nothing but a weighted pivot arm located at the rear of the machine. The arm consists of a series of rollers. The arm moves up and down to keep the film under tension, while the film transports, which is controlled by sensors. There is also an automatic film tracking sensor that ensures the film will not wander from side to side as it is moving.

Film Cutting:

Applicable only for multitrack machine: After the free rollers, the film proceeds into the cutting section called the slitter assembly. During this step in the process, based upon how many lanes the stick pack machine has, the large roll of packaging film is cut into that amount of strips. These strips form the basis for creating the individual stick packs. As the film passes through the knives The film is still kept under tension and cuts with the help of a specially designed roller. As it is pulled through this assembly, the film is cut into individual strips of packs.

Stick Pack Forming:

The Individually cut films are then passed over over multiple forming tubes, As the cut film crests the collar on each forming tube, it folds around the tube so that the end result is a ‘stick pack’  which is long and narrow in shape with the two outer edges of the film overlapping each other for complete packaging. This part is also known as a folding collar in operator language. The forming tubes can be set up to create a lap seal or fin seal. A lap seal creates a flat seal by overlapping the two outer edges of the film. On the other hand, a fin seal marries the insides of the two outer edges of the film which creates a seal that sticks out, like a fin of a fish. Most of the manufacturers prefer a lap seal as it is considered more aesthetically pleasing and is economical as it uses less material than a fin seal.

Stick Pack Filling and Vertical Sealing:

Now it is time to put the product in the packaging. Once the film stops moving, a vertical sealer bar which is hot moves forward and makes contact with the vertical overlap on the film. The vertical seal bar presses itself against the forming tube which creates the vertical seal.


Horizontal Sealing and Cutting:

Then a horizontal sealing jaw table is set to move up and down according to the set length of the pouch. During this table draw movement product is filled in a formed tube. Then with the help of a horizontal sealing jaw, which closes to seal the stick pack that is the top portion of the filled pouch and the bottom of the upcoming one.

Horizontal sealing jaw is also fitted with a cutting knife which cuts and separates the pouch into individual one.

Stick Pack Discharge:

In some machines pouch cutting is done in the next station. After the product is filled into each stick pack, a knife blade then cuts the bag into individual packets. Finished stick packs drop into the outfeed chute which has a flap that opens and closes at predetermined intervals.

Conclusion:

Single Track stick packaging is growing in popularity as it is an economic solution for unitised packaging, easy to access for customers and uses less material hence also good for the environment. The global demand for stick packaging is increasing at a slow yet steady pace and its biggest users are the medicine and food industry.

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