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What goes into making an e-liquid bottle?
4th December 2017
Ever wondered how an e-liquid bottle is made? In this article we provide an overview of the Injection Blow Moulding (IBM) process

We thought it would be useful to provide those involved in the e-liquid sector with a quick overview of the Injection Blow Moulding process - used by SONE to manufacture our range of e-liquid bottles.

What is Injection Blow Moulding?

The injection blow moulding (IBM) process is used in the manufacture of hollow, plastic objects. It is particularly suited to the production of e-liquid bottles as it produces items of a consistently accurate weight and shape.

The IBM process

  1. Polymer granules are fed from a hopper into a horizontally moving screw assembly in the IBM machine. The material is melted using temperature controlled heated bands, compressed and then fed in metered amounts into a manifold.
  2. From there, the melted material is injected through a narrow nozzle into a hollow, pre-heated mould, called a preform. This process produces the fully-formed, threaded neck area of the bottle with a narrow tube of plastic material attached. The tube is the basis for the body of the bottle and is the length of the finished item.
  3. The premould and the blow mould then open and the core rod, which has defined the internal shape of the preform, rotates from the premould to the blow mould.
  4. The blow mould closes, and compressed air is blown from the core rod into the preform, inflating it into the finished bottle shape.
  5. The blow mould then opens and the core rod, which is now holding the fully formed bottle by its neck, rotates to the removal station.
  6. Finally, the bottle is stripped from the core rod and ejected from the machine as the finished article.

The advantages of the IBM process

  • In comparison to other plastic production processes, injection blow moulding produces bottles with a higher level of dimensional accuracy, particularly in the neck area.
  • Bottles have an exact weight with an even and precise distribution of plastic material.
  • The process is ideal for the production of large quantities of product due to the high level of accurate repeatability from bottle to bottle.