06/05/2020
Packaging specialist B.Pack, a member of the Wauters Group, relies on Heidelberg technology for highly productive manufacturing of luxury packagings. The company recently installed its second custom machine from Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG (Heidelberg). This special machine configuration enables the back and front of folding cartons to be produced in one pass. This means, for example, that small luxury folding cartons with full-surface printing on the inside with two dark blue inks and protective coating followed by five colors on the outside with gloss coating, matt coating, or gold coating can be produced. Coating prior to perfecting and various inking and coating units enable a high level of flexibility. The machine can also be used for collecting packagings, for example for three to five different perfume bottles, or for shower gel, deodorant, and perfume from one brand. These are produced for the airport duty free sector, where text is required more and more frequently on the inside of these cartons.
The new with twelve units – an XL 75-2+LY-P-5+LYL – is in production at B.Pack at the Couches site in Burgundy, France. The pressroom has been home to a Speedmaster XL 75-6+LYY-1+L since the beginning of 2015. “We’re very happy with Heidelberg as a partner for the packaging industry. Following positive experiences in the past, we’re now looking forward to the new machine customized to our specific requirements to increase our flexibility in packaging applications,” explains Jeremy Desbois, Pressroom Manager at B.Pack on a visit to the Heidelberg site in Wiesloch-Walldorf. Together with colleagues from the Wauters Group, he watched the final assembly of the Group’s new machine. “This means that we will then be able to combine two-sided coating and printing inline in one pass and offer our customers highly embellished luxury packagings with a range of different coating effects.” The machine will process cartons made from substrate thicknesses of up to 0.8 mm.
Over a history going back 110 years, the Wauters Group has evolved into the name for packagings for perfume, cosmetics, and spirits. It has a workforce of around 150, split between two sites in France. Large to medium-sized packagings are manufactured in long runs at the Group’s headquarters in Paris/Villebon-sur-Yvette. B.Pack in Couches specializes in smaller and medium runs with high levels of finishing. “We see Heidelberg as a competent partner, who listened to us and configured and supplied exactly the machines we need for our luxury packagings,” confirms Abderrazak Benalia, Technical Director of the Wauters Group. “Already the installation of the first Speedmaster XL 75 in 2015 has taken our production to a new level. We were able to increase productivity by a third and halve makeready times. We have thus become an extremely attractive partner for our customers, as they require ever smaller runs in ever shorter times. The sophisticated machine technology, in combination with the highly responsive service that Heidelberg provides, gives us the necessary reliability. We are known for our innovativeness, and Speedmaster technology lets us turn our ideas into reality.”
The service provided by Heidelberg was an important criterion for the purchase of another Speedmaster XL 75. “Already with the first machine, we were very impressed by the efficiency of the service during the few calls we had - whether remote or on-site. We have therefore extended the service contract, and also signed a contract for the new machine,” explains Abderrazak Benalia.
The new Speedmaster XL 75 is unequaled, with three coating units and special dryer combinations with UV, infrared, and hot-air dryers. In addition to a non-stop feeder and non-stop delivery, it features an extended delivery and, with the StaticStar Advanced package, all the preparations for uninterrupted sheet travel. The coating it uses is , which is optimally coordinated to the machine and delivers high gloss points.
“We know that the French market and the customers from the major brands have very specific requirements and high standards for packagings,” explains Rainer Wolf, Head of Sheetfed Product Management at Heidelberg. “With our broad application and mechanical engineering expertise, we work with our customers to find the optimal solution to combine quality and economy. The result is tailored machine configurations with unique selling points and competitive advantages for our customers. Realizing such complex machine projects from the idea and technical execution to the successful implementation in the customer’s plant requires experts and teamwork in many fields from project planning and software, to development, service, and application technology. We’ve invested heavily here, and built up a strong, interdisciplinary team in the last few years. What this means for packaging printers for the luxury segments in particular is an opportunity for continued diversification. So we’re all the more pleased that the Wauters Group has ordered from us again and we’ve gotten to prove our leading role in packaging printing.”
In addition to the standard-production double-coating models in 50 x 70 format, two to three Speedmaster XL 75 are sold every year as custom models. The main markets for this are France, Germany, Poland, USA, and Mexico. The number of custom machines is much higher in the 70 x 100 format, with every fifth machine a custom model. The number of all machines with individual customizations is well above 40 percent.
Photo 1: Packaging printing company B.Pack visited Heidelberg to watch the final assembly of its second custom machine. Right to left Klaus-Peter Handermann (Final Assembly Printer), Carsten Deutsch (Account Manager), Abderrazak Benalia (Technical Director, Wauters Group), Jeremy Desbois (Pressroom Manager, B.Pack), Laurent Ambinat (Sales Consultant), Olav Spielmann (Packaging Sales Support, France) and Marco Salzinger (PMC instructor).
Photo 2: Final assembly of the Speedmaster XL 75-2+LY-P-5+LYL custom machine in Hall 6 of Heidelberg’s Wiesloch-Walldorf site.
Masahiro Kaneko
Marketing
Email: masahiro.kaneko@ heidelberg.com
06/05/2020
Packaging specialist B.Pack, a member of the Wauters Group, relies on Heidelberg technology for highly productive manufacturing of luxury packagings. The company recently installed its second custom machine from Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG (Heidelberg). This special machine configuration enables the back and front of folding cartons to be produced in one pass. This means, for example, that small luxury folding cartons with full-surface printing on the inside with two dark blue inks and protective coating followed by five colors on the outside with gloss coating, matt coating, or gold coating can be produced. Coating prior to perfecting and various inking and coating units enable a high level of flexibility. The machine can also be used for collecting packagings, for example for three to five different perfume bottles, or for shower gel, deodorant, and perfume from one brand. These are produced for the airport duty free sector, where text is required more and more frequently on the inside of these cartons.
The new with twelve units – an XL 75-2+LY-P-5+LYL – is in production at B.Pack at the Couches site in Burgundy, France. The pressroom has been home to a Speedmaster XL 75-6+LYY-1+L since the beginning of 2015. “We’re very happy with Heidelberg as a partner for the packaging industry. Following positive experiences in the past, we’re now looking forward to the new machine customized to our specific requirements to increase our flexibility in packaging applications,” explains Jeremy Desbois, Pressroom Manager at B.Pack on a visit to the Heidelberg site in Wiesloch-Walldorf. Together with colleagues from the Wauters Group, he watched the final assembly of the Group’s new machine. “This means that we will then be able to combine two-sided coating and printing inline in one pass and offer our customers highly embellished luxury packagings with a range of different coating effects.” The machine will process cartons made from substrate thicknesses of up to 0.8 mm.
Over a history going back 110 years, the Wauters Group has evolved into the name for packagings for perfume, cosmetics, and spirits. It has a workforce of around 150, split between two sites in France. Large to medium-sized packagings are manufactured in long runs at the Group’s headquarters in Paris/Villebon-sur-Yvette. B.Pack in Couches specializes in smaller and medium runs with high levels of finishing. “We see Heidelberg as a competent partner, who listened to us and configured and supplied exactly the machines we need for our luxury packagings,” confirms Abderrazak Benalia, Technical Director of the Wauters Group. “Already the installation of the first Speedmaster XL 75 in 2015 has taken our production to a new level. We were able to increase productivity by a third and halve makeready times. We have thus become an extremely attractive partner for our customers, as they require ever smaller runs in ever shorter times. The sophisticated machine technology, in combination with the highly responsive service that Heidelberg provides, gives us the necessary reliability. We are known for our innovativeness, and Speedmaster technology lets us turn our ideas into reality.”
The service provided by Heidelberg was an important criterion for the purchase of another Speedmaster XL 75. “Already with the first machine, we were very impressed by the efficiency of the service during the few calls we had - whether remote or on-site. We have therefore extended the service contract, and also signed a contract for the new machine,” explains Abderrazak Benalia.
The new Speedmaster XL 75 is unequaled, with three coating units and special dryer combinations with UV, infrared, and hot-air dryers. In addition to a non-stop feeder and non-stop delivery, it features an extended delivery and, with the StaticStar Advanced package, all the preparations for uninterrupted sheet travel. The coating it uses is , which is optimally coordinated to the machine and delivers high gloss points.
“We know that the French market and the customers from the major brands have very specific requirements and high standards for packagings,” explains Rainer Wolf, Head of Sheetfed Product Management at Heidelberg. “With our broad application and mechanical engineering expertise, we work with our customers to find the optimal solution to combine quality and economy. The result is tailored machine configurations with unique selling points and competitive advantages for our customers. Realizing such complex machine projects from the idea and technical execution to the successful implementation in the customer’s plant requires experts and teamwork in many fields from project planning and software, to development, service, and application technology. We’ve invested heavily here, and built up a strong, interdisciplinary team in the last few years. What this means for packaging printers for the luxury segments in particular is an opportunity for continued diversification. So we’re all the more pleased that the Wauters Group has ordered from us again and we’ve gotten to prove our leading role in packaging printing.”
In addition to the standard-production double-coating models in 50 x 70 format, two to three Speedmaster XL 75 are sold every year as custom models. The main markets for this are France, Germany, Poland, USA, and Mexico. The number of custom machines is much higher in the 70 x 100 format, with every fifth machine a custom model. The number of all machines with individual customizations is well above 40 percent.
Photo 1: Packaging printing company B.Pack visited Heidelberg to watch the final assembly of its second custom machine. Right to left Klaus-Peter Handermann (Final Assembly Printer), Carsten Deutsch (Account Manager), Abderrazak Benalia (Technical Director, Wauters Group), Jeremy Desbois (Pressroom Manager, B.Pack), Laurent Ambinat (Sales Consultant), Olav Spielmann (Packaging Sales Support, France) and Marco Salzinger (PMC instructor).
Photo 2: Final assembly of the Speedmaster XL 75-2+LY-P-5+LYL custom machine in Hall 6 of Heidelberg’s Wiesloch-Walldorf site.
Marketing