Bottom line: the right sauce filling machine is determined by three factors — viscosity, particulate content, and container type. Match these first; then optimize for output and automation level.
Sauce Viscosity Spectrum and Machine Recommendations
| Viscosity Level | Example Products | Recommended Filling Method |
|---|---|---|
| Thin (water-like) | Soy sauce, vinegar, juice, brine | Gravity filler, flow meter, peristaltic pump |
| Medium | BBQ sauce, salad dressing, marinade | Rotary pump filler or piston filler |
| Thick | Ketchup, tomato paste, chili paste | Piston filler |
| Chunky | Salsa, pasta sauce, sambal with pieces | Wide-throat piston filler |
For more detail on piston vs pump filling technology, see our comparison guide: Piston vs Pump Filler.
Particulates: The Factor Many Buyers Overlook
Chunky sauces with seeds, vegetable pieces, chili flakes, or herb fragments require careful machine design. Three things affect the specification:
- Particulate size: The nozzle diameter must be at least 3–4× the maximum particle size to prevent blockages.
- Particulate concentration: High-concentration chunky sauces may need a higher-volume cylinder stroke per fill cycle and a wider valve opening.
- Particle fragility: If particles must remain visually intact (visible vegetable pieces, chili rings), the valve actuation speed and nozzle design must prevent shear damage.
Providing a product sample before machine specification is strongly recommended for chunky sauce products.
Container Types and Machine Compatibility
Container type determines the overall machine architecture, not just the filling head:
- Glass bottles and PET bottles: Standard bottle-filling configuration with conveyor and neck guide; cap type (screw, snap, pump) determines capping station design.
- Glass jars (wide-mouth): Wide-mouth filling with piston; compatible with chunky sauces.
- Stand-up pouches: Requires a pouch filler or premade pouch machine with a pump or piston dosing head.
- Cups and trays: Cup-filling and sealing line; common for single-serve portions.
- Sachets: Small sachet filler with peristaltic or piston dosing.
Hot Fill Capability
Many sauce products — ketchup, chili paste, BBQ sauce — are filled at elevated temperatures to achieve pasteurization and extended shelf life without preservatives. SunGene supports hot-fill applications up to 95°C. Hot-fill configuration affects material selection, pump type, valve design, and seal compatibility. Confirm fill temperature at inquiry stage.
Hygiene and Clean-in-Place Design
Sauce filling machines require thorough daily cleaning, especially for products with high sugar, protein, or oil content. SunGene sauce fillers are built with:
- SUS304 or SUS316L product-contact surfaces as standard
- Food-safe seals and gaskets (FDA-grade where required)
- Smooth internal surfaces and minimal dead zones to prevent product residue buildup
- CIP-friendly design with easy-access nozzle disassembly for manual cleaning
Filling Technology Comparison
| Factor | Gravity / Flow Meter | Pump Filler | Piston Filler |
|---|---|---|---|
| Viscosity range | Thin only | Thin to medium | Medium to thick/chunky |
| Particulates | Not suitable | Small particles only | Yes (wide-throat design) |
| Accuracy | Good for thin | Good | High (positive displacement) |
| Cleaning | Simple | Moderate | More involved for chunky |
| Hot fill | Yes | Configurable | Yes (with correct material) |
Frequently Asked Questions
What filling machine is best for ketchup or chili sauce?
A piston filler is standard for thick sauces like ketchup and chili paste. Chunky versions with visible particulates need a wide-throat piston design with large-bore nozzles. See our liquid filling machine range for available configurations.
What is the difference between piston and pump fillers?
Piston fillers use positive displacement for precise volume per stroke — ideal for thick and chunky products. Pump fillers use continuous flow and suit thin-to-medium viscosity products. Use our recommendation form to get a match for your sauce.
Can one machine handle sauces with particulates?
Yes, with the right design. A wide-throat piston filler handles seeds, vegetable pieces, and chili flakes. Particulate size and concentration affect nozzle and valve design — share samples before specification.
What containers can a sauce filling machine support?
Glass bottles, PET bottles, jars, stand-up pouches, cups, and sachets — each requires a different machine configuration. Share your full container range at inquiry stage. Browse our machinery range for an overview.
What should I send before asking for a quotation?
Sauce type, approximate viscosity, particulate content and max particle size, container type, fill volume, output target (containers/hour), and destination country plus voltage. Contact us with these details to receive a meaningful recommendation.