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Case Packing & Palletizing.

End-of-line automation. Pack finished cartons into shipping cases, then stack pallets — for logistics-ready packs at 8 to 25 cases per minute.

What this machine does

The last step before the truck.

A case packer takes finished primary packs (cartons, pouches, bottles) and loads them into a corrugated shipping case. The case is then sealed and conveyed to a palletizer, which stacks it onto a pallet in a programmed pattern. The pallet is then stretch-wrapped and ready to ship.

When does automation pay back? Below ~8 cases per minute, manual case packing is viable. Above 12, automation starts paying back within 18–24 months on labor savings alone. Above 20, you need a case packer to keep up with most modern primary packaging lines.

Three main formats: wrap-around (the case blank wraps around a pre-formed collation of product — fastest, most secure), top-load (product drops in from above — flexible, good for fragile product), and side-load (product pushes in horizontally — common for cartons).

Best-fit products

Runs these well — and what each one needs

  • Carton multipacks (12-pack, 24-pack)→ wrap-around
  • Bottles, jars in grid patterns→ top-load with dividing inserts
  • Pouch multipacks→ top-load with gentle handling
  • Trays of product→ side-load
  • Mixed-SKU cases→ robotic pick-and-place

Configurations & options

Right-sized to your real product

  • Case type: wrap-around, top-load, side-load, tray-style
  • Loading: mechanical, robotic pick-and-place, gantry
  • Case blank magazine capacity: 120 blanks
  • Glue or tape closure
  • Palletizer integration: robotic arm, conventional high-level, low-level
  • Stretch wrapper (turntable or rotary arm)
  • Label printer-applicator
  • PLC + HMI: Siemens or Mitsubishi (configurable)

Is this the right machine for you?

Four honest questions before you buy

  • Are you shipping more than 12 cases per minute? Below that, manual may suffice.
  • Do you have a stable upstream line feeding primary packs in consistent collations?
  • Are you OK with one case format per machine, or do you need frequent format changes?
  • Have you planned for pallet supply and stretch film logistics?

Common questions

The things buyers actually ask us.

Wrap-around vs. top-load — what's the difference?
Wrap-around forms the case around the product collation. Strongest, lowest cost per case, but requires precise collation. Top-load drops product into a pre-erected case — more flexible, easier on fragile product.
Should I add a palletizer?
At sustained throughput above 12 cases/min, yes — manual palletizing becomes the bottleneck. Below 8, manual palletizing can keep up.
Can one palletizer handle multiple pallet sizes?
Yes — most modern palletizers accept 1200×800, 1200×1000, and 48×40 in pallets with a format change.
How much floor space do I need?
Case packer: ~12 m². Palletizer: ~18 m². Stretch wrapper: ~6 m². Plan for infeed and outfeed conveyors between each.

What we'd test before you commit

Send 20 sample primary packs + 50 sample case blanks.

We'll test collation stability, case-erection reliability, and sustained throughput. Video within 15 working days. No charge.

Get a sample test

Spec sheet

Three models, sized to your speed target.

ModelSpeedCase typeLoadingPowerFootprint
JC-W15–25 cpmWrap-aroundMechanical · robotic optional3.5 kW2600 × 1900 × 2300 mm
JC-T12–22 cpmTop-loadRobotic or mechanical4.5 kW2800 × 2000 × 2400 mm
JC-S8–18 cpmSide-loadRobotic5.5 kW3000 × 2100 × 2500 mm
Full spec sheet with options, integration, and spare parts. Download full spec sheet — PDF

Want a video of your product running before you commit?

Send us a sample — we'll run it on a matching machine and send the video back.

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