
Oil Filling Guide
Oil Filling Machine Buying Guide
A practical buyer guide for edible oil, lubricant oil, bottle oil, pail, drum and IBC filling projects.
Short Answer
Choose an oil filling machine by oil type and container first. Edible oil projects usually need food-contact material and clean bottle handling, while lubricant and bulk oil projects focus more on viscosity, drip control, bucket or drum handling and site safety review.
Start from the oil type
Broad oil filling searches can mean cooking oil, olive oil, motor oil, hydraulic oil, gear oil or bulk industrial oil. The medium decides the contact material, dosing method, anti-drip design, cleaning expectation and container handling.
- Food-grade oil usually needs SUS304 contact parts, stable bottle handling and clean changeover planning.
- Lubricant oil often needs viscosity review, anti-drip nozzles and bucket or drum closure details.
- Bulk oil and chemical oil should include site safety, operator access and weighing requirements in the first RFQ.
Match the machine to the container
A 500 ml PET bottle line, a 5 L tin line, a 20 L pail filler and a 200 L drum station are different projects. Container photos or drawings help the supplier review guides, conveyor height, capping tools, filling heads and labeling modules.
Choose dosing by accuracy and format
Oil filling can use net-weight, volumetric, piston or flow-meter methods. Net weight is often preferred for larger containers or value-sensitive projects. Volumetric or piston filling may fit smaller, stable bottle formats when the product behavior is predictable.
- Use net weight when fill weight and container tolerance matter more than speed alone.
- Use volumetric or piston filling when bottle size, product behavior and output target are stable.
- Ask for engineering review when the same line must cover several oils or container sizes.
Do not compare price before comparing scope
A useful quotation should state whether the scope includes filling only, or filling plus capping, labeling, coding, packing, conveyors, spare parts, documentation and commissioning support. Low quotations often hide these scope differences.
Selection Points
RFQ Checklist
| 1 | Oil type, viscosity if known and whether it is food-grade or industrial use. |
| 2 | Container volume, material, photos or drawings and cap or closure type. |
| 3 | Target output by bottles, pails, drums or totes per hour. |
| 4 | Required modules such as filling, capping, labeling, coding, packing and conveyors. |
| 5 | Destination country, power standard, installation condition and any safety requirement. |
Common Buyer Questions
Can one oil filling machine handle edible oil and lubricant oil?
Sometimes, but it should not be assumed. Edible oil and lubricant projects have different cleanliness, viscosity, nozzle, container and changeover requirements. Share both products early so the engineering team can review whether a shared configuration is realistic.
Is net-weight filling always better for oil?
Not always. Net weight is strong for larger containers and high-value accuracy control. Volumetric, piston or flow-meter filling can be practical for stable bottle formats. The right choice depends on container size, speed, oil behavior and accuracy target.
What is the fastest way to get a useful oil filling quotation?
Send oil type, container photos, cap details, target output and desired line scope. A short video of the current manual or semi-automatic process also helps the supplier understand the project faster.
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Need a clearer filling machine quotation?
Send the product name, container details, output target and required modules. HEMUfill will route the inquiry to the right filling machine configuration.
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