Hardware filling machines

Hardware filling machines for small parts, fasteners and components.

Compare the machine routes most relevant to hardware and component filling projects in the UK.

Start with the application

Hardware filling machines for small parts, fasteners and components.

Hardware filling enquiries usually depend on product size, flow, target weight and the final pack style. The strongest route is often a weighing-based solution rather than a volumetric powder system, but it depends on the exact component range.

Combi weighers

A useful route for free-flowing small components and hardware where weighing accuracy matters.

Pouch sealing

Relevant where completed hardware pouches need dependable final closure and finished presentation.

What to send with your enquiry

Useful details help Lancing recommend the right route.

1

Explain the product

Describe how the material behaves in practice, whether it is a powder, granule, pellet, bean, snack, part or dry food product, and how it flows in the packhouse environment.

2

Set the target dose

Share the fill weight or dose range, acceptable tolerance and whether more than one fill size is required.

3

Confirm the pack style

Pouch, sachet, rigid container, stand-up pouch or a bag formed on the machine all change the most suitable route.

4

Define the output

Required packs per minute, footprint limits and any wider line-integration requirement help narrow the shortlist.

Related searches

More ways buyers search before they enquire.

These linked pages target closely related commercial-intent searches so the site can surface for more UK buyer terms without changing the visible website design.

Frequently asked questions

Common questions for this type of filling project.

Are hardware components suitable for weigh filling?

Free-flowing small components often are, provided the dose range and pack format match the chosen machine.

What pack styles are common for hardware?

Pouches, sachets, small bags and rigid containers can all be used depending on the product size and presentation needs.

Does one machine suit all component sizes?

Not necessarily. The best route depends on the component range, target weight and throughput needed.