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A Maintenance Guide to Packaging Blade Replacement for High-Speed Lines

Equipment downtime may be silently eating away at your profitability. One hour of downtime can now cost upwards of between $36,000 and $2.3 million, depending on the sector and plant size. In the packaging industry, maintaining sharp blades helps keep your packaging equipment up and running. It also makes cut quality more consistent for neater packaging, even on high-speed lines.

Learn how to know when it's time for packaging blade replacement, the signs of wear to look for, and the factors that impact blade life.

Key Indicators That Packaging Blades Need Replacement

You should regularly inspect your packaging equipment for signs of wear, but there are other indicators that your blades are wearing out. Watch for:

  • Tearing: A dull, chipped, or misaligned blade can tear packaging materials rather than cut them cleanly. If your packaging film or other materials are coming out ripped or ragged, check your blades.
  • Inconsistent Seals: Form, fill, and seal (FFS) machines cut and seal a package at the same time. A blade makes the cut while heated jaws clamp and seal the package. If the blade is dull or damaged, it doesn’t always cut cleanly, which can make the seals uneven or incomplete.
  • Rising Torque: As packaging blades become dull or damaged, the machine has to use more force to make a cut, which increases torque and machine stress.
  • Reduced Cut Accuracy: Dull or damaged blades don’t cut through packaging materials with the same precision as sharp ones. If your cuts are less accurate, check your blades.

How Substrate and Line Speed Affect Blade Life

When you’re planning maintenance and blade replacement schedules, factor in the material you’re working with, along with your processing speeds.

If you’re working with abrasive materials, such as mineral-filled packaging or film made of recycled plastic, your blades will wear out faster. Denser materials require more force, which makes blade edges wear out faster. Glue or other sealing adhesives can build up on the blade and dull it.

High-speed lines can be hard on packaging blades. Processing at high speeds creates more friction and generates more heat, which can warp or damage blades.

Resharpening vs. Full Blade Replacement

Replacing your packaging blades is more expensive than resharpening them, but sometimes it benefits you more. Consider these pros and cons before you visit your sharpening provider.

Resharpening

Resharpening brings your packaging blades back to life, restoring sharpness and edge geometry. The process involves removing dull or worn edges, cracks, and chips, and reshaping the blade to your specifications.

  • Pros: Resharpening is less expensive than replacing a blade. It extends the blade’s life and keeps your packaging machines working consistently. Sharpening blades also reduces strain on the machine’s motor, which further reduces downtime.
  • Cons: While your blade is at the sharpener, you either have to replace it with a spare or take the machine down. An inexperienced sharpener could remove too much material or reshape your blade so it’s not within your machine’s tolerances. Then you would have to replace it anyway.

Full Blade Replacement

If your blades are beyond repair, you need to replace them. Even the best industrial machine knives have a lifespan and need to be replaced when they reach the end of it. Sometimes a blade is too damaged for repair. Always replace blades with deep cuts, cracks, or warping.

  • Pros: A new industrial blade makes your machine perform like it’s new, giving you consistent, high-quality cuts. When you replace an industrial knife with a custom blade from a reliable maker, you can be confident it fits OEM specifications and won’t cause excessive machine wear.
  • Cons: High-quality or customized blades are expensive. You also have to take the machine down while you wait for your new blade.

The Role of Edge Geometry and Tolerances

Blade geometry refers to how a blade is designed, including its shape, edge angles, and thickness. The packaging industry uses multiple types of blades with different geometries depending on the packaging materials.

Blades with smaller angles are sharper and more precise. These blades are good for thin plastic films, cardboard, and foam. Bigger angles aren’t as sharp, but they can withstand more force. These blades are good for abrasive packaging materials and heavy-duty loads.

Your packaging blades may also be beveled or serrated to make perforated packages.

Tolerances

Tolerance refers to the level of variation allowed in a blade’s thickness or flatness before it won’t work in a machine. Tighter tolerances mean that the machine doesn’t allow much variation in the blade.

For example, if your machine requires a 0.2 mm blade for thin film and has a tolerance of 0.002 mm, you’re limited in your blade selection. Any blade thicker than 0.2002 mm won’t fit.

Tight tolerances keep blades balanced and enable your machine to work smoothly. They also give you consistent, repeatable cutting accuracy. Always be sure to note your machine’s tolerances if you’re ordering custom industrial blades so you know they’ll fit.

Maintenance Best Practices for High-Speed Packaging Lines

Keep your packaging machines running longer with routine maintenance. Paying attention to blades and other machine components reduces unplanned downtime and helps you stay on schedule without sacrificing quality. Follow these best practices:

  • Create a Maintenance Schedule: Having the manufacturer inspect your equipment and perform routine maintenance extends machine life and keeps parts from breaking unexpectedly. Check your manual and schedule routine maintenance based on recommendations and your production volume.
  • Inspect the Equipment: Designate an experienced manager or floor worker to inspect your blades regularly. Power the machine down and look for signs of wear and tear or damage that might affect output.
  • Clean Your Blades: Assign someone to clean the blades at the end of every shift to remove any debris or residue. It can save time to do the inspection while cleaning.
  • Check Fasteners: Make sure all fasteners in your blade’s assembly are tight and secure.

Optimize Blade Performance With the Right Replacement Strategy

Routine maintenance, including sharpening, can improve blade longevity, but packaging blade replacement eventually will be a necessity.

When it’s time to replace your blades, consider custom solutions. Hyde Industrial Blades has 150 years of experience customizing packaging blades. We understand how different materials affect the blades and will work within OEM specifications to create a high-quality blade.

Upgrade today for performance blades. Get a quote.