담당자 : Alice Gu
전화 번호 : 86-15862615333
왓츠앱 : +8615862615333
April 2, 2026
A 120 BPH gallon filling machine can be a practical starting point for a small bottled water plant, but it is not the right answer for every beginner. The real question is not whether 120 bottles per hour sounds “large enough.” The real question is whether that output matches your daily order volume, labor model, hygiene requirements, and growth plan over the next 12 to 24 months. A wrong decision at this stage often leads either to underused equipment or to an early upgrade that could have been avoided.
A 120 BPH machine means the line can produce up to 120 bottles per hour under rated conditions. In practice, however, small water plants do not run at theoretical maximum output all day. Empty bottle loading, cap handling, cleaning, inspection, and small interruptions reduce real efficiency. That is why new buyers should estimate daily production using practical efficiency rather than nameplate output alone.
| Working Time | Rated Output | Estimated Line Efficiency | Practical Daily Output |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8 hours | 960 bottles/day | 85% | about 816 bottles/day |
| 10 hours | 1,200 bottles/day | 85% | about 1,020 bottles/day |
| 12 hours | 1,440 bottles/day | 85% | about 1,224 bottles/day |
These figures show why 120 BPH can be enough for a plant serving a limited local market, especially in the early stage. For example, if a new HOD operation is only supplying a few office buildings, retail refill points, or one delivery area, a 120 BPH line can support initial growth without over-investment.
FillPack’s QGF-120 model provides a useful benchmark for this production class. The machine is designed for 3–5 gallon bottles, rated at 120 BPH, uses stainless steel 304 material, runs on 380V 3-phase 50Hz power, and has a total power requirement of 2.68 kW. The listed machine weight is 400 kg, and the footprint is 3100 × 570 × 1450 mm with side cap loader, plus a 2000 mm conveyor. It is also sold as a semi-automatic line, which helps keep the initial investment lower than fully automatic systems.
Another reason this class is attractive to beginners is budget control. The QGF-120 page lists a reference price of USD $4,300/set, with delivery time at 15–25 working days and certification including CE and ISO9001. For a first-time plant owner, that price point can make it easier to start production without taking on the capital burden of a much larger line too early.
A 120 BPH gallon filling machine is usually enough when the business is still validating demand. That includes new local distributors, family-run water plants, village or town-based delivery systems, and operators who run one shift with modest order volumes. In these situations, the priority is often getting stable output and safe product quality without spending too much on unused capacity.
It is also a reasonable fit when labor is available and affordable. Semi-automatic systems require more operator involvement in bottle handling, cap loading, and monitoring, but this may not be a major disadvantage for very small plants. If labor cost is manageable and the order pattern is predictable, 120 BPH can be a cost-effective entry point.
The 120 BPH class can also work well when the product mix is simple. If the plant is producing only standard 3-gallon and 5-gallon bottles, without complex downstream labeling, sleeve shrinking, or high-speed dispatch, a smaller line may be enough to maintain steady operations in the first stage of growth.
The main limitation of a 120 BPH line is not just speed. It is the way a small line affects the whole plant once demand starts rising. If the factory begins adding new delivery routes, serving multiple towns, running two shifts, or building stock for wholesale channels, the production window becomes tighter. A line that once looked economical can quickly turn into the bottleneck of the entire operation.
Another issue is process integration. The QGF-120 description shows a two-stage washing sequence using disinfectant fluid and pure water. That may be sufficient for some starter operations, but growing plants often prefer more structured sanitation and more integrated line design. On larger FillPack lines, washing, filling, and capping are combined more tightly, and downstream modules such as checking light, shrink tunnel, and coding are easier to integrate into one process flow.
For many beginners, the real decision is not “120 or 450.” It is “120 or a slightly more advanced automatic line.” This is where a 200 BPH integrated system becomes very relevant. The FillPack QGF-200 page presents a complete 3–5 gallon line with a semi-auto de-capper and washer, a monoblock rinser-filler-capper with full SUS304 construction, a checking light, a label shrink tunnel, a coding machine, and conveyor support. The listed price range is USD $4,850–$6,000, and the machine is designed for 3–5 gallon bottles sized φ270 × 490 mm.
| Item | 120 BPH QGF-120 | 200 BPH Integrated Line |
|---|---|---|
| Capacity | 120 BPH | 200 BPH |
| Automation level | Semi-automatic | More integrated automatic flow |
| Bottle size | 3–5 gallon | 3–5 gallon |
| Material | Stainless Steel 304 | Full SUS304 monoblock |
| Power / Voltage | 2.68 kW / 380V 3PH 50Hz | 380V 50Hz 3P |
| Weight | 400 kg | 800 kg |
| Key modules | Washing, filling, capping | Washer, filler, sealer, checking light, shrink tunnel, coder |
| Price reference | $4,300 | $4,850–$6,000 |
For a plant owner who expects moderate growth in the near future, an integrated 3–5 gallon filling line may offer a better balance between entry cost and expansion potential than a basic 120 BPH setup.
A 120 BPH machine is a good option only if the plant answers “yes” to most of these questions:
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