Did You Know?

Creating an Induction Cap Sealer Operating Window

Feb 3rd, 2012 | By Mark Plantier | Category: Did You Know?, Operating Tips

If you’ve invested in an induction cap sealer for your packaging line you expect every container on the line to leave your facility 100% hermetically sealed. The secret to success is optimizing your induction sealer with an operating window. What’s an operating window? When you set up your induction sealer you should follow an established protocol [...]

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Cap Sealers for European Packagers

Feb 2nd, 2012 | By Mark Plantier | Category: Did You Know?

Cap sealers in Europe are used to help packagers and consumers reduce waste, preserve freshness and prevent leaks. The packaging sectors in which cap sealers are most utilized include food, pharmaceutical, healthcare, household products, chemical, and other industrial areas. Package design teams in Europe are using the benefits provided by induction sealers to reduce the pack weight of their containers.  This is primarily [...]

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Induction cap sealing in India

Aug 9th, 2010 | By Mark Plantier | Category: Did You Know?

Induction cap sealing in India is growing at a rapid rate.  And as the sophistication of retail stores continue to emerge the expectations of Indian consumers are also on the rise. Induction sealers create hermetic seals that prevent leaks, preserve freshness and provide tamper-evidence. Companies in the pharmaceutical, food, beverage, petroleum industries are creating product [...]

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Cap sealers provide tamper evidence

Mar 13th, 2009 | By Mark Plantier | Category: Did You Know?

It’s no accident that so many packagers rely on cap sealers for tamper evidence. Cap sealers provide a clean, effective and non-contact means of achieving tamper-evidence. The induction field created by a cap sealer is designed to create a hermetic seal between a cap liner and the lip of a container. When the correct type of heat sealable foil [...]

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Cap Sealer Glossary

Mar 13th, 2009 | By Mark Plantier | Category: Did You Know?

Ever wonder what the difference between “air-cooled” and “water-cooled” induction sealing is? Maybe what “tamper evident” means? Here you will find common phrases/terms found throughout the cap sealing industry.

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Pressure sensitive liners and induction seals

Mar 13th, 2009 | By Mark Plantier | Category: Did You Know?

Many companies compare the economic and packaging benefits of pressure sensitive liners and induction seals. Pressure sensitive liners are less expensive, but they do not provide any of the benefits that induction seals provide.

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