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Less than two years after Krones’ launched its Contiform 3 Speed into the market, a hundred machines have now been sold, with the 100th machine being delivered to the soft drinks’ vendor Odenwald Quelle in Heppenheim, Germany.

In late 2018, Krones set a benchmark in stretch blow-moulding technology for PET bottles with the introduction of its Contiform 3 Speed, boasting an hourly output of 2750 containers per cavity.

Since October 2020, this milestone machine from Krones has been up and running at the main facility of Odenwald Quelle, a producer of soft drinks headquartered in Heppenheim, Germany.

For Andreas Schmidt, managing partner at Odewald Quelle, the decision to opt for the stretch blow-moulder from the House of Krones came quickly and easily.

“The Contiform 3 Speed boasts several persuasively attractive pluses – it is compactly dimensioned and produces more containers, while consumption levels are lower,” says Schmidt.

“And it is also effortlessly handles preforms made of rPET. This advantage was a crucial importance to us because we’ve since 2020 been selling only plastic bottles made of 100 per cent recyclate.”

Whereas in the case of conventional stretch blow-moulders, a pressure pad in the mould carrier additionally keeps the two halves of the mould together during the process, the Contiform 3 Speed has been designed in such a way that the two halves are kept together purely by means of the revamped mould carrier locking mechanism.

The omission of the pressure pad means that the moulds can produce bottles with a volume of up to two litres – and this in a blow-module size so far used in the small-cavity machines, which is on average 22 per cent smaller than the comparable machines.

But, according to Krones, eliminating the pressure pad provides advantages, not only in terms if line layout, but also in regard to media and energy consumption.

It makes for savings of up to 15 per cent of highly compressed air in comparison to all other stretch blow-moulders currently available on the market.

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