Title: Spirits Bottle Mouth Finish Perpendicularity
– The First Critical Step in Filling & Sealing
In spirits production lines, a bottle's "looks" matter, but there's one invisible,
untouchable parameter that determines success or failure: bottle mouth perpendicularity.
This is especially critical for non-standard bottle shapes. It directly affects filling efficiency,
capping integrity, and whether leakage or cap jump occurs during transport.
So, what is bottle mouth perpendicularity? Simply put, it refers to the straightness of the
bottle mouth's central axis from 0mm to 16mm down from the top rim. The smaller the deviation,
the more reliable the seal. If the deviation is too large, even the best cap won't prevent leaks.
Here's our systematic approach to controlling this parameter in five steps:
1. Front-End Control: Digital Inspection + Process Adjustment
Control begins before the bottle is even formed. We use digital inspection equipment to
pre-assess bottle mouth dimensions during forming. If we find that a batch doesn't
match the customer's cap specifications (e.g., poor fit with cork or polymer caps), we immediately adjust:
· Forming temperature and temperature differences
· Mold dimensional parameters
· Machine power and timing sequences
This "inspect-then-adjust" approach eliminates problems at the source.
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2. Post-Annealing: Automated Lab Re-Inspection
After annealing (to remove internal stress), bottles go to the lab for automated perpendicularity testing,
focusing on the 0–10mm range. This serves as a "mid-term exam" to catch any fine deformations caused
during the annealing process.
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3. In-Line 100% Inspection: Full-Angle Automated Testing
For high-volume, standard products, we use fully automatic inspection machines to achieve 360° full-angle
testing. From the top rim down to 16mm, every angle is checked. This is not sampling—every single bottle
must pass independently.
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4. Transport Sealing Traceability: Beyond Perpendicularity
Passing perpendicularity tests doesn't guarantee complete safety. During long-distance transport,
temperature changes cause pressure fluctuations inside the bottle. If perpendicularity deviates locally
at specific points (e.g., at 7mm or 12mm depth), "cap jump" can occur—the cap loosens or even pops off.
That's why we've established a multi-dimensional dimensional traceability system, recording perpendicularity
data at these critical cross-sections:
· 4mm position
· 7mm position
· 12mm position
· 16mm position
Every batch can be traced back to actual measurements at these four points, ensuring straightness
remains controllable across the entire capping height range.
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5. Matching Different Cap Materials – Closing the Delivery Loop
Different customers use different cap materials: natural cork, synthetic polymer corks, plastic tamper-evident caps, etc.
Each has a different sensitivity to bottle mouth perpendicularity. Based on each customer's specific fit tolerances,
we set reverse-engineered inspection standards. This truly achieves "one customer, one standard."
Ultimately, what we deliver to customers is not just a good-looking spirits bottle, but one with controllable
straightness from 0mm to 16mm, reliable sealing performance, and the ability to withstand long-distance
transport and temperature fluctuations.
Perpendicularity control is, at its core, a commitment to certainty. Every millimeter of straightness is a promise
to the safety of the liquid inside.
#SpiritsBottling #BottleMouthPerpendicularity #LeakagePrevention #DigitalQualityInspection #SealingReliability