Extrusion Blow Molding Machines by Application
Different container applications place very different demands on extrusion blow molding machines. Selecting a machine based only on tonnage or cavity count often leads to unstable cycles, high scrap rates, or limitations when production scales.
This page helps you navigate extrusion blow molding machine selection based on the type of container you plan to produce, before moving into detailed machine configurations.
Select by Container Application
| Приложение | Typical Size Range | Common Production Challenges | Recommended Machine Setup | View |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jerrycan Production | 5–20 L | Handle strength, wall thickness balance, cycle stability | Accumulator head, multi-head configuration | View |
| Detergent Bottles | 500 ml – 5 L | Pinch-off quality, surface finish, weight control | Continuous head, servo-assisted control | View |
| Shampoo Bottles | 250 ml – 1 L | Uniform wall distribution, cosmetic appearance | High parison control resolution | View |
| Edible Oil Bottles | 1–5 L | Food-contact compliance, deformation resistance | Food-grade configuration, stable cooling | View |
| Chemical Containers | 1–30 л | Chemical resistance, clamp force, durability | Heavy-duty clamp, reinforced structure | View |
Why Application-Based Selection Matters
- Different containers require different parison programming strategies to maintain consistent wall thickness.
- Mold cooling design and cycle stability vary significantly between small bottles and large containers.
- Handle formation, pinch-off geometry, and top-load strength depend heavily on application-specific setup.
- Incorrect matching often results in higher scrap rates and unstable long-term production.
What Happens When the Application Is Mismatched
Selecting an extrusion blow molding machine without fully considering the end container application often leads to production issues that cannot be solved through parameter adjustment alone.
- Inconsistent wall thickness and bottle deformation
- Weak handles or stress cracking in high-load areas
- Excessive scrap during startup and changeovers
- Unstable cycle times under continuous operation
- Pinch-off failures and bottom leakage
- Higher-than-expected energy consumption per unit
- Limited flexibility for future product changes
Information Needed for Application Evaluation
To recommend a suitable extrusion blow molding solution, we typically review the following project information:
- Container volume and target weight
- Material type (HDPE, rHDPE, multi-layer)
- Target output per hour
- Product drawing or physical sample
- Neck finish and handle requirements
- PCR content or sustainability targets
- Downstream automation or inspection needs
Discuss Your Application with an Engineer
If you are planning a new container project or upgrading an existing production line, our engineering team can help evaluate the most suitable extrusion blow molding configuration for your application.