Packaging Strategies used its April 2026 issue to highlight how conveyor belts are being used more strategically across packaging production. The focus was not only on moving product from one station to another. It was on preventing jams, improving alignment, protecting packaging quality, and reducing manual intervention.
What happened
The article, featuring AMMEGA, reviewed how belts are supporting multiple packaging scenarios, from carton and box folding to corrugated board handling and final packaging lines. It described belts as a bigger part of overall line performance, especially where speed, grip, tracking, and low damage rates matter.
Why it matters for this industry
This matters because buyers are no longer choosing belts only by broad family name. Packaging applications now expect more from the belt itself: positive grip, edge stability, low-friction grouping, heat and humidity resistance, and cleaner product handling. That pushes procurement closer to application-based belt selection instead of simple cross-reference buying.
Practical takeaway
- Carton and folding lines need belts that reduce slip and paper jams.
- High-volume corrugated production needs more attention to positioning, accumulation, and smooth sheet movement.
- Different packaging stages need different cover, friction, and construction choices instead of one general-purpose belt.
For companies selling industrial and conveying belts, this is useful market direction. It suggests that application guidance and conversion support are becoming more valuable than just sending a catalog list.
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