Why diameter matters
A small diameter bottle may be light and unstable, while a wider bottle may need more space and smoother transfer. The diameter range influences whether automatic unscrambling or rotary feeding is likely to be practical.
Bottle size range
Bottle diameter is one of the first details to check because it affects bowl, disc, guide, conveyor and transfer design.
Specification focus
A small diameter bottle may be light and unstable, while a wider bottle may need more space and smoother transfer. The diameter range influences whether automatic unscrambling or rotary feeding is likely to be practical.
Height, shape, base stability, empty weight and plastic stiffness all change how the bottle behaves. A 20 mm bottle and a 100 mm bottle can need very different handling even if both are plastic.
Send diameter, height, neck style, empty weight, photos of the bottle standing and lying down, plus the target bottles per minute or bottles per hour.
Key details
The fastest way to narrow the selection is to send bottle dimensions, photos or samples, target speed, conveyor height, downstream machinery and available footprint.

Questions
A range may be possible, but change parts, adjustment and bottle behaviour must be reviewed.
Unstable empty bottles can fall during transfer or queueing, reducing real line output.
Related pages
Open this page for related bottle unscrambler specification advice.
Open this page for related bottle unscrambler specification advice.
Open this page for related bottle unscrambler specification advice.
Open this page for related bottle unscrambler specification advice.
Open this page for related bottle unscrambler specification advice.
Open this page for related bottle unscrambler specification advice.
Open this page for related bottle unscrambler specification advice.
Specification support
Lancing UK can advise whether a compact rotary unscrambler, automatic bottle unscrambler or wider line-infeed package is the correct route.