Multihead combination weigher discharging mixed nuts, dried fruits and snack pieces onto conveyor belt. Stainless steel industrial weighing system with touchscreen HMI for snack and nut packaging lines.

Combination Weighers Explained: The Technology Behind Faster, More Accurate Packaging

TL;DR: Combination weighing uses multiple heads to measure portions simultaneously, then an algorithm selects the best combination to hit the target weight. Result: ±0.5–1g accuracy vs ±2–5g for volumetric fillers. Best for nuts, snacks, candy, dried fruit, and frozen foods. 16 heads = the practical sweet spot for most manufacturers.

Section 1: Why Combination Weighing Beats Volumetric

Volumetric fillers dispense a fixed volume — but when product density changes, giveaway follows. A multihead weigher solves this by weighing each portion individually, then running a combination algorithm to find the closest match to your target weight.

PMMI benchmarking data shows combination weighers deliver ±0.5–1g accuracy versus ±2–3g for cup fillers. The real-world math is stark: a line running 80 bags per minute with just 1g average overfill accumulates roughly 96 tonnes of giveaway per year. Keypack Intelligent customers typically see 18–30 month payback periods driven almost entirely by giveaway reduction.

Section 2: How It Works (Step by Step)

  1. Infeed: Product enters the central distribution bowl and is distributed to individual feed trays.
  2. Weighing: Each head measures its portion via a load cell in real time.
  3. Combination algorithm: The controller searches all possible combinations and selects the one closest to the target weight.
  4. Memory hopper: The selected portions are held temporarily before discharge.
  5. Discharge: Product drops into the packaging machine's forming tube.

Load cell quality sets the baseline accuracy — X(0.5) is the metrology certification standard to look for. Algorithm depth determines how well the machine maintains accuracy at high speeds.

Section 3: Accuracy vs Speed Trade-off

Rated speed is not the same as actual throughput. A machine rated at 100 combinations per minute does not necessarily produce 100 finished bags per minute — the gap depends heavily on product characteristics. Free-flowing nuts see minimal impact; sticky or irregular products can see significant throughput reduction.

Here's how the main technologies compare:

  • Cup filler: ±2–5g accuracy, 80–120 bags/min — fast but imprecise
  • Linear weigher: ±0.3g accuracy, 30–50 bags/min — precise but slow
  • Multihead combination weigher: ±0.5–1.5g accuracy, 60–120 bags/min — the mainstream choice for snacks, nuts, and candy

Section 4: Head Count Guide

  • 10–14 heads: Best for target weights above 100g. Smaller footprint, lower cost.
  • 16 heads: Handles 10g–1000g range. Best cost-to-performance ratio — the most popular choice for food packaging lines.
  • 20–24 heads: For light target weights under 50g or highest accuracy demands.
  • 32+ heads: Pharmaceutical and high-end confectionery — niche applications.

Keypack Intelligent's three-layer design increases combination probability without expanding the machine footprint. The dual-material weighing configuration allows two products (e.g., mixed nuts or trail mix) to be weighed simultaneously on a single machine. View the 16-Head 3-Layer Combination Weigher →

Section 5: What Works and What Doesn't

Works well:

  • Nuts and seeds: almonds, cashews, pistachios, peanuts, sunflower seeds
  • Snacks: potato chips, tortilla chips, pretzels, popcorn, extruded snacks
  • Dried fruits: raisins, cranberries, dried mango, apricots
  • Confectionery: gummies, hard candy, chocolate pieces
  • Frozen foods: dumplings, meatballs, seafood portions
  • Hardware: screws, fasteners, small plastic parts

Doesn't work well:

  • Fine powders (flour, milk powder, cocoa) → use an auger filler
  • Liquids and pastes → use a liquid filler
  • Oversized or bulky items

Section 6: Integration Checklist

  • Discharge height and alignment: Too high causes product breakage; too low creates maintenance access issues.
  • Timing sync: Weigher and packaging machine must be synchronized via CAN bus or Modbus protocol.
  • Air supply: 6–8 bar, clean and dry. Moisture or oil contamination directly affects performance.
  • Installation time: Single machine: 3–7 days. Full line integration: 7–14 days.

Section 7: Maintenance Schedule

  • Daily: Clean hoppers and feed trays between changeovers.
  • Weekly: Zero-point calibration check; inspect feed tray vibration.
  • Monthly: Full calibration with certified test weights; inspect sealing surfaces.
  • Quarterly: Check all electrical connections.

Load cells require periodic replacement — a significant cost to factor into your TCO. Controller failure means machine downtime, which is why remote diagnostic support matters. Keypack Intelligent's IoT-enabled models monitor zero-point drift and vibration anomalies, sending predictive maintenance alerts before failures occur.

Section 8: ROI Calculation Framework

  1. Weigh 50 finished bags on your current line and calculate average overfill × annual volume = baseline giveaway cost.
  2. Project multihead accuracy (±0.5–1.5g) and calculate annual savings.
  3. Payback = (purchase price + installation cost) ÷ annual savings.
  4. Add throughput improvement as a secondary benefit — be conservative.
  5. Subtract annual maintenance cost (3–5% of purchase price per year).

Typical payback: 18–30 months.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between a combination weigher and a checkweigher?

A combination weigher doses product into bags — it controls filling accuracy. A checkweigher sits downstream and verifies the finished package weight for QC. They serve different functions and are often used together on the same line.

What's the real accuracy of a 16-head weigher in production?

Keypack Intelligent's 16-head systems are X(0.5) certified. In real production, most customers see ±0.5–1.5g depending on product characteristics and target weight.

What products shouldn't use a multihead weigher?

Fine powders, liquids, pastes, and oversized bulky items are not suitable. Use an auger filler for powders and a liquid filler for liquids.

What does annual maintenance cost?

Budget 3–5% of the purchase price per year for routine maintenance and wear parts.

Bottom Line

The financial case is clear: giveaway reduction alone typically pays for the machine within 18–30 months. The key to a successful purchase is matching the configuration to your actual product — not paper specs. Factory testing with your real materials before purchase is essential.

👉 Get a Configuration Review from Our Engineering Team
👉 Browse Keypack Intelligent's Multihead Weighing Systems
👉 View the 16-Head Combination Weigher

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