What Makes a Case Packer the Best for Your Line?

.
6 min read

On this page

Manufacturers who evaluate case packers only on upfront capital cost consistently make the wrong decision and discover it 18 months after commissioning, when the machine they bought is either starving the line, generating quality failures, or taking 40 minutes to change over between SKUs.

Factor 1, Throughput Match

The best case packer is one that runs at the rated speed of your primary packaging line , not below it, and not so far above it that you are paying for unused capacity.

How to calculate: Primary packaging speed (units/min) ÷ Units per case = Cases per minute required. Add 15–20% headroom for growth.

Product TypeConfigurationSustained Speed
PouchesCase Packer for Pouches (SCARA dual-robot)40 pouches/min
BottlesCase Packer for Bottles (Six Axis, 200 kg)Up to 120 bottles/min
Shrink packsCase Packer for Shrink PacksUp to 400 cans/min
Dual-modeShrink Packs & BottlesUp to 400/120 (mode dependent)

Factor 2, Product and SKU Range

The best case packer handles every product variant your line runs today , and every variant you are likely to add in the next three years , without a separate machine for each.

Cybernetik’s Automatic Tool Changer on the Six Axis configuration switches between up to 5 product variants without manual intervention. The Versatile Vacuum Gripper handles multiple pouch and carton types with a single end-of-arm tool.

Factor 3, Changeover Time and Method

For a multi-SKU line, changeover time is a direct determinant of weekly productive capacity. A line with four format changes per week at 35 minutes manual changeover recovers 120+ hours annually by switching to recipe-driven automatic changeover , equivalent to more than three full production shifts per year.

Cybernetik target: under 10 minutes total changeover time for any active format pair, updating case packer AND downstream palletizer simultaneously from a single HMI.

Credits:

Factor 4, Quality Control Integration

Missing unit detection , confirms every cell in the matrix is occupied before the case is sealed

  • Vision inspection , checks for defective products and misformed cartons before loading is complete.
  • Optional metal detection , mandatory for most food retail accounts
  • Track and trace , case-level data capture linking every sealed case to its production batch

All are available on Cybernetik’s fully automatic configurations as standard or integrated optional features. None are available on semi-automatic case packers.

Factor 5, Integration Architecture

The best case packer integrates cleanly with your upstream primary packaging equipment and your downstream palletizer under a shared PLC/SCADA architecture. A case packer from the same supplier as your palletizer enables a single recipe change to update both machines simultaneously.

Factor 6, Total Cost of Ownership, Not Just Case Packer Cost

The purchase price of a case packer is typically 30–50% of the total cost of ownership over 5 years. The remaining 50–70% includes:

  • Labor cost: 1–2 operators per shift per manual loading station, annualised over asset life
  • Quality failure cost: chargebacks, returns, and compliance incidents from missing units
  • Changeover downtime cost: productive time lost to format changes, annualised
  • Maintenance cost: driven by mechanical complexity , fewer transmissions means lower ongoing cost

Factor 7, Compliance and Hygiene Standards

For food, pharmaceutical, and personal care applications, the best case packer meets GMP/cGMP compliance requirements with minimal human contact at the open-case loading stage, CE certification, and cleanable design.

“Choosing the best case packer is less about equipment specifications and more about how effectively the machine supports your production strategy.”

See it in action

Matching the Best Case Packer to Your Product Type

ProductBest ConfigurationKey Differentiator
Flexible pouchesCase Packer for PouchesStaggered lifting system + vibratory thickness conveyor – unavailable elsewhere
Multiple bottle sizesCase Packer for Bottles5 variants, auto tool changer, missing bottle detection standard
Shrink multipacksCase Packer for Shrink Packs400 cans/min with simultaneous dual-pack loading
Bottles AND shrink packsCase Packer for Shrink Packs & BottlesOne robot, two formats – eliminates capital cost of second machine

Case Packer Cost: The Total Cost of Ownership Model

Cost CategoryManual/Semi-AutomaticAutomatic Robotic
Capital costLowerHigher
Annual labor (loading operators)High (2 ops × 3 shifts × 250 days)Minimal (monitoring only)
Annual changeover time costHigh (30–45 min × changes/week × 52)Low (under 10 min × changes/week × 52)
Annual quality failure costHigher (missing units, defective cases)Lower (automated detection)
5-year totalOften 2–3× capital cost higherOften 30–40% lower than semi-automatic

The Cybernetik Advantage

  • Custom end-of-arm tooling designed for your exact product geometry , not catalogue grippers.
  • Integrated quality control , missing unit detection, vision inspection, track and trace built into the machine
  • Quality control is a compliance requirement , missing unit detection and track and trace are only on automatic systems
  • Recipe-driven changeover under 10 minutes , case packer AND downstream palletizer updated simultaneously
  • Single-architecture integration , case packer and palletizer under one PLC/SCADA layer, one support relationship
  • GMP and CE-compliant construction , food-grade contact surfaces, documented compliance for audit requirements
  • 30+ country track record , 4 manufacturing facilities, installations across food, beverage, FMCG, pharma, chemicals

Frequently asked questions

The one that matches throughput, handles the full SKU range with acceptable changeover time, includes quality control as an integral feature, integrates under shared PLC architecture, and delivers the lowest total cost of ownership.

Labor savings + changeover time recovery + quality failure cost avoidance + throughput gain value − annualised capital and maintenance cost = net annual value. Most manufacturers achieve payback within 12–24 months.

Six Axis for high payload (200 kg), multi-product flexibility, and automatic tool changing. SCARA for high cycle rates at lighter payload (6 kg) , pouches, sachets, small cartons.

Missing unit detection before sealing, vision inspection for defective products and cartons, track and trace data capture. Optional: metal detection, broken product rejection.

Share

Related Blogs