Which Labeling Machine Fits Your Line? 3 Real Scenarios
Labeling is the last machine your product touches before it hits the shelf — and the first thing a customer sees. Get it wrong, and you're not dealing with wrinkled labels. You're dealing with rejected batches, retailer returns, and a brand that looks careless before anyone opens the package.
But "get it right" doesn't mean buying the most expensive labeler. It means matching the machine to your actual container — its shape, material, and how many sides need a label. Keypack builds three labeling machines for three fundamentally different jobs. Here's what each one does on a real production floor.
Scene 1: Round Bottles, One Label, High Speed — YDT Series
Picture a beverage co-packer running 10,000 bottles of cold-brew tea per shift. The bottles are PET, cylindrical, 60mm diameter, 160mm tall. Each one needs a single wraparound pressure-sensitive label — brand on the front, ingredients wrapped around the curve.
This is the YDT's home turf.
The Keypack YDT Round Bottle Labeling Machine handles bottle diameters from 20 to 100mm and heights from 40 to 180mm. At 50–120 bottles per minute, a SICK photoelectric sensor triggers label dispensing the moment each bottle hits position. A Delta PLC with recipe storage holds parameters for up to 10 SKUs — so switching from 300ml tea bottles to 500ml juice bottles takes under two minutes, not half a shift.
What makes it reliable on a real line: the label tension control system. Without consistent web tension, label length drifts. You get labels that wrap short — leaving adhesive exposed to the next bottle, which creates a sticky mess on the conveyor — or labels that overlap themselves. The YDT's tensioning design keeps label feed stable even at top speed. The adaptive pressure roller conforms to different bottle profiles, so you're not re-tuning the press assembly every time the bottle diameter changes by 5mm.
If your product is round and you need one label per container, this is almost certainly your machine. For a deeper dive into why round surfaces are actually the hardest to label with precision, see our guide to round bottle labeling accuracy.
Scene 2: Two Labels, One Pass — DTB Series
Now picture a nutraceutical manufacturer bottling collagen supplements. Each 200ml HDPE bottle needs a front label (brand + flavor) and a back label (supplement facts panel, barcode, lot number, expiry). Running two passes through a single-head labeler doubles labor time. Running two separate single-head machines eats floorspace and creates a synchronization headache.
The Keypack DTB Positioning Labeling Machine applies single or double labels in one pass at 30–80 bottles per minute. It handles round plastic bottles up to 100mm diameter and 180mm height. The optional circumferential positioning detection system ensures the back label lands exactly opposite the front — not at 175 degrees, not at 190. Dead center on the other side, every time.
On a real production line, the DTB sits between filling and capping. Bottles enter spaced at equal intervals by an adjustable mechanism. A SICK sensor detects each bottle and triggers the cycle. Labels peel and press in one continuous motion — no stopping, no manual alignment. The bilingual Delta touch panel stores recipes, and an optional coding machine integration lets you print lot codes and expiration dates inline without a separate inkjet station downstream.
For pharmaceutical, nutraceutical, and food products where regulations or branding demand front-and-back labeling, the DTB eliminates the bottleneck that single-head systems create. We covered the engineering behind dual-head placement accuracy in our double-sided labeling machine guide.
Scene 3: Flat Surfaces, Mixed Formats — SED-PT Series
Different problem entirely. A cosmetics contract packer runs cartons of face cream, flat pouches of sheet masks, and rigid boxes of gift sets — all on the same line, sometimes in the same shift. Every format has a flat top surface. None of them are round. None of them need side or wraparound labels.
The Keypack SED-PT Flat Surface Labeling Machine applies self-adhesive labels to the top surface of boxes, cartons, pouches, and flat-lid containers at 20–100 pieces per minute. Label size range: 6–250mm in length, 20–110mm in width. Product height range: 2–150mm. That covers everything from thin sachets to tall rigid gift boxes — without swapping out guide rails or applicator heads.
The feature that operators appreciate most: no-product no-label detection. When the SICK sensor detects an empty spot on the conveyor, the label feeding motor pauses automatically. No wasted labels. No adhesive residue on the belt that requires scraping at end of shift. The synchronous chain conveyor mechanism keeps label placement bubble-free even on lightweight pouches that tend to shift during application. And the SUS304 stainless steel frame with anodized aluminum alloy components holds up in washdown environments — relevant for food and cosmetic lines where hygiene audits happen.
This is the workhorse for contract packers, e-commerce fulfillment centers, and any operation running multiple flat-packaged SKUs through one line.
How to Pick in 30 Seconds
| Container Shape | Labels Needed | Speed Range | Machine |
|---|---|---|---|
| Round bottle | 1 (wraparound) | 50–120 bpm | YDT |
| Round bottle | 2 (front + back) | 30–80 bpm | DTB |
| Flat box/pouch/carton | 1 (top surface) | 20–100 pcs/min | SED-PT |
Three rules that prevent buying the wrong machine:
Container shape picks the machine, not the other way around. A square carton won't go through a round-bottle labeler, and a cylindrical bottle wobbles on a flat-surface conveyor without side guides.
Label material matters as much as machine specs. Film labels on glass need different peel tension and adhesive behavior than paper labels on HDPE. Tell your supplier what substrate you're labeling before you spec the machine — otherwise you'll chase placement errors that aren't the machine's fault.
Speed ratings mean nothing without changeover context. A labeler that hits 120 bpm but takes 45 minutes to switch between SKUs will lose to an 80 bpm machine with 2-minute recipe changes if you run five formats per shift. Look at your real production schedule, not the catalog number.
Integrating a Labeler Into Your Line
All three Keypack labeling machines communicate with upstream and downstream equipment via standard PLC protocols. Typical placement: after filling and capping, or between filling and capping depending on whether you label empty or filled containers.
Browse the full lineup at our Labeling Systems collection for technical specs, dimensional drawings, and configuration options. If you're building a new line or replacing a legacy labeler, send your container dimensions, label count, and target throughput. We'll confirm which model fits — and which one doesn't — before you place an order.
Still deciding? Labeling mistakes are expensive because they happen at the end of the line — after you've already paid for raw materials, filling, and sealing. A misapplied label wastes a finished product. Contact our engineering team with your container specs and we'll spec the right machine in one conversation.