Understanding the full journey from PET resin to finished bottle — through preform injection, reheat, and stretch blow moulding — is essential for anyone specifying preform moulds or optimising a packaging line. Here is the complete picture.
The production of most PET bottles follows a two-stage process: first, PET resin is injection moulded into a preform (Stage 1); second, the preform is reheated and blow moulded into its final bottle shape (Stage 2). The two stages can be performed on separate machines (2-stage or RSBM) or integrated into a single machine (1-stage).
IV specified
Dried to < 40ppm
Preform produced
270–290°C
Mould cooling
Post-mould tubes
Finish crystalliser
140–160°C
IR heating
~100–115°C
Axial stretch
+ radial blow
Biaxially oriented
Final shape
| Preform Design Variable | Effect on Final Bottle |
|---|---|
| Wall thickness distribution | Controls material distribution in bottle — thin preform base can cause base thinning in bottle |
| Preform length vs. bottle length | Stretch ratio — determines biaxial orientation intensity and mechanical properties |
| Gate geometry quality | Gate scar becomes the bottle base injection point — must be clean and centred |
| Preform IV (post-processing) | Higher IV in preform = better bottle mechanical properties and burst pressure |
| Crystallinity in preform body | Any crystallinity in preform body prevents even stretch — causes uneven wall in bottle |
Hexamech manufactures both injection preform moulds and stretch blow moulds for the food, beverage, and consumer goods industries. Specifying both from a single engineering partner ensures that preform design and blow mould cavity geometry are optimised together — eliminating the finger-pointing that occurs when preform and blow mould suppliers disagree about the root cause of bottle defects.
Hexamech supplies both preform moulds and blow moulds. One engineering partner, one responsibility, better outcomes.
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