Introduction
At a Glance
Pallet stretch wrappers come in three architectural types: turntable (load rotates, machine stays fixed), rotary-arm (machine circles a stationary load), and robotic (mobile unit travels to the pallet). Each handles different load profiles and facility constraints. Turntables are cost-effective for stable compact loads; rotary-arms excel with fragile or tall items; robots prioritize flexibility over throughput. The right choice depends on what you’re wrapping and where you have space.
Three stretch-wrapper architectures dominate the market: turntable, rotary arm, and robotic. They look similar in vendor proposals—all wrap pallets, all replace hand labor, and all promise less film waste than the machine they’re replacing—but each one is built around a different physics. The wrong fit for your operation shows up as wasted film, dropped loads in transit, or a wrapper that bottlenecks the line behind it.
In this article, we’ll cover:
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How stretch wrapping creates load securement
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What the three machine types do mechanically
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Trade-offs: throughput, cost, load stability, footprint
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Which machine fits which operational scenario
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Specifications that matter for any machine
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Common pitfalls that drive waste and downtime
What Does Stretch Wrapping Actually Do?
Stretch wrapping creates a cohesive unit from a pallet of individual items. The process works through three mechanisms:
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Elasticity — The film is stretched before and during application, so its recovery force holds product tightly
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Containment Force — The film tension multiplied by the number of wraps creates total inward pressure that resists item movement
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Overlap — Multiple wraps from bottom to top ensure no zone is uncovered
Per ASTM D4649-20 (the industry standard guide for stretch film use) the role of stretch wrapping is “unitizing, reinforcing, and palletizing” loads for storage and transport in warehouses and distribution centers. Machines solve for speed and uniformity compared to hand labor. But not all machines are the same.
The Three Machine Types
The three main architectures differ in one fundamental way: what rotates. Understanding this distinction is the key to matching each machine to the right load.
Turntable Stretch Wrappers — The Load Spins
A turntable wrapper spins the load.
The pallet sits on a rotating platform while a fixed film carriage overhead moves up and down, dispensing film as the load rotates. The load itself never leaves the turntable during the wrapping cycle.
This design creates centrifugal force as the pallet spins. For stable, well-stacked loads (such as boxes, cases, and uniform products) this rotation actually helps. The spinning motion helps the film conform and cinch tightly. Cost is where turntables win as the base models run at $60,000–$65,000. They also have a compact vertical footprint, making them ideal for warehouses without abundant floor space.
Throughput depends on load profile. Semi-automatic machines run at 30–40 loads per hour, and high-speed automatic models with dual film carriages run up to 80–100 loads per hour. However, context matters as a turntable running 30–40 fragile light loads may run 80–100 stable uniform cases.
The Trade-Off: Load Fragility
For light or unstable loads (such as tall beverage cases, tissue packs, items with high centers of gravity, or fragile overhanging goods) the rotation is a problem. Product can shift, topple, or crush during the wrapping cycle itself.
Rotary-Arm Stretch Wrappers — The Carriage Circles the Load
A rotary-arm wrapper circles the load.
The pallet stays stationary on the floor while a rotating arm or carriage pivots around it, and the film-dispensing head moves up and down. The load never moves or rotates, only the film carriage travels around it.
Because the load stays still, there is no centrifugal force. This machine is ideal for loads that cannot tolerate rotational stress such as light loads that would topple on a turntable, tall products with high centers of gravity, items with overhanging or fragile components, or loose configurations. The mechanical complexity of the rotating carriage costs slightly more than a turntable: $70,000–$80,000 for a base model.
Rotary-arms typically require 40–80 loads per hour depending on load profile and automation level. Rotary-ring variants (where a rotating film-ring lowers around the load, spins to apply film, then raises) can exceed 100 loads per hour, closing the speed gap with turntables.
The Trade-Off: Footprint
The overhead rotating mechanism requires more space than a turntable, making rotary-arms less suitable for tight facilities.
Robotic / Mobile Stretch Wrappers — The Unit Travels to the Load
A robotic wrapper travels to the load.
A mobile unit (typically three or four-wheeled, free-roaming) moves to the pallet and wraps it in place. The film carriage is mounted on the mobile platform and circles the load while the load remains stationary (therefore, no turntable and no fixed infrastructure).
Because the load never moves or rotates, robotic systems excel at oversize or odd-shaped loads that exceed turntable or rotary-arm size and weight limits. Long products, wide pallets, extremely heavy loads are all handled without moving the pallet. Robotic wrappers also enable decentralized wrapping. The robot travels to wherever pallets are positioned in the warehouse, eliminating the need to reposition unstable or heavy loads to a fixed wrapping station.
The Trade-Off: Throughput
Mobile robotic units typically process 20–30 loads per hour, lower than fixed turntables or rotary-arms. But the payoff is operational flexibility. Robotic systems reduce forklift repositioning traffic, minimize product-shift risk on difficult loads, and adapt to variable warehouse layouts. For operations prioritizing flexibility over pure speed, that trade-off often justifies the premium.
Trade-Offs at a Glance
Here’s how the three compare across key dimensions:
Dimension
Turntable
Rotary-Arm
Robotic/Mobile
Throughput
Turntable
30–100 loads/hr
Rotary-Arm
40–100+ loads/hr
Robotic/Mobile
20–30 loads/hr
Load-stability tolerance
Turntable
Stable, compact loads; centrifugal risk for tall/light loads
Rotary-Arm
Excellent for tall, fragile, unstable loads; no rotation
Robotic/Mobile
Excellent; handles oversize/fragile loads without transfer
Footprint
Turntable
Compact, vertical
Rotary-Arm
Larger, overhead mechanism
Robotic/Mobile
Minimal fixed station; mobile
Capital cost (base model)
Turntable
$60K–$65K
Rotary-Arm
$70K–$80K
Robotic/Mobile
Higher (bundled automation); varies
Centrifugal-force concern
Turntable
Yes — for fragile/light loads
Rotary-Arm
No
Robotic/Mobile
No
Forklift dependency
Turntable
Must position load on turntable
Rotary-Arm
Must position at station
Robotic/Mobile
Minimal; robot travels to pallet
Best for irregular loads
Turntable
Not ideal; rotation creates risk
Rotary-Arm
Excellent
Robotic/Mobile
Excellent
Note: Throughput ranges depend on load profile, pre-stretch settings, and machine-specific tuning. A turntable might run 30–40 on unstable light loads but 80–100 on stable uniform cases, so it’s important to consider the context and not to assume one architecture always beats another. Also keep in mind that published vendor claims vary by region and model, so real-world performance will differ.
Which Machine Fits Your Operation?
Choosing which machine is best for your operation comes down to what you’re wrapping, where you have space, and what operational flexibility you need.
Stable, Compact, High-Volume Loads
Turntable
Cost-effective, footprint-efficient, and throughput matches high-volume distribution centers. If you’re wrapping 50+ loads per day of uniform corrugated cases on standard pallets, and loads are well-stacked, a turntable’s lower capital cost and high-speed variants (80–100 loads/hr) are hard to beat. The centrifugal force helps in this scenario.
Fragile, Tall, or Irregular Loads
Rotary-arm
Robotic
Beverage cases have tall centers of gravity, tissue packs are light and shift easily, and produce or loose items don’t stack uniformly. On a turntable, these kind of loads risk toppling or shifting during the wrap cycle. A rotary-arm’s stationary platform or a robotic unit’s mobility keeps the product stable and intact. Trade-off is that rotary-arms have a larger footprint, so be sure enough floor space is available.
Decentralized or Mobile Wrapping
Robotic
Cross-dock operations, facilities with variable warehouse layouts, or environments where moving unstable loads creates safety or damage risk. The robot eliminates dedicated wrapping stations and wraps pallets wherever they’re positioned. While you gain flexibility with this method, the trade-off is throughput speed.
Space-Constrained Facilities
Turntable (compact)
Robotic (no fixed station)
Rotary-arms require more space for the overhead rotating mechanism, making them less suitable if floor or ceiling height is limited. If footprint is your bottleneck, rule out rotary-arm first.
Specifications That Matter for Any Machine
Regardless of which architecture you choose, three operational variables affect wrap quality on all machines: pre-stretch percentage, containment force, and film type and gauge.
Pre-Stretch Percentage
Pre-stretch is the degree to which film is stretched before it contacts the load. Industry standard is 150–300%, with 250% being the sweet spot in published OEM guidance. (A 250% pre-stretch means the film is stretched to 2.5 times its original length.)
Higher pre-stretch reduces film consumed per load but increases break risk, especially at load corners where tension concentrates. Lower pre-stretch uses more film per load but is safer for delicate items. The choice is a cost-versus-consistency trade-off, and it should match your load type.
Containment Force
Containment force is the tension in the stretched film multiplied by the number of wrapping passes—the total “squeeze” holding items in place. Industry-standard field range is 15–26 lbs per linear inch of load perimeter, and these are norms (not ASTM-mandated requirements). Modern machines allow variable containment force at different heights, adapting to load shape (wider at base, narrower at top).
Film Type and Gauge
Hand-applied stretch film runs 63–80 gauge while machine-applied film (especially pre-stretched rolls optimized for carriage systems) typically runs 50–65 gauge. Selection depends on load type (sharp corners, contamination risk, outdoor exposure) and your unitization target. ASTM D4649 provides guidance on selection, but the machine’s compatibility with your film roll size and pre-stretch carriages should drive the decision.
Common Pitfalls That Drive Waste and Damage
Understanding the pitfalls shows why the machine choice and specification matter.
Under-Wrapped Loads
Insufficient pre-stretch or too few wraps leaves zones uncovered or loosely bound. Items shift during transit, topple in storage, or separate from the unitized mass. Approximately 50% of in-transit damage results from ineffective wrapping. The economic cost is substantial: $7.2 billion annually in food and beverage and health and beauty alone, with broader estimates of $60 billion across all CPG due to in-transit damage from improper wrapping.
Under-wrapping is preventable through consistent wrap application and proper pre-stretch tuning.
Over-Stretched Film and Inconsistent Placement
Excessive pre-stretch or too many wraps causes film to break at load corners, forcing restart cycles and manual supplemental wrapping. Inconsistent wrap placement, including variations in top/bottom offsets or overlap distance, creates zones of poor containment. Both add labor and material cost.
Prevention is proper pre-stretch setting and machine calibration to match your load profile.
Film Wastage and Sub-Optimal Machine Tuning
Hand-wrapped pallets consume 30–50% more film than optimized automatic systems due to overlapping uncertainty and safety margins. Modern powered pre-stretch machines, when properly tuned, reduce film consumption per load by 15–25% compared to hand-wrap or under-prestretch machine settings (offsetting capital investment over time).
The key is matching pre-stretch and containment-force settings to your actual load type vs. running generic defaults.
What Done Right Looks Like
When you run your operation with the right machine and proper specification, you should expect the following:
Your line runs at rated throughput without jams or restarts
Film consumption is consistent and minimal
Load damage in transit is near zero
Operators understand the machine’s settings for different load types and can adjust without creating waste or breakage
Conclusion
The choice between turntable, rotary-arm, and robotic stretch wrappers should be driven by your load profile, facility constraints, and what operational flexibility you need. The primary questions to ask are, what are you wrapping and where do you have space?
Key Takeaways
Turntable spins the load — Excellent for stable, compact items in a compact footprint at lower cost. If you’re running consistent patterns and loads are well-stacked, this is your baseline.
Rotary-arm circles the load — Ideal for fragile, tall, or irregular items without centrifugal force risk. If load variety is your challenge, rotary-arm solves for that provided you have the footprint to support it.
Robot travels to the load — Maximum flexibility for decentralized wrapping and oversized items. If you need operational flexibility and can trade throughput for it, robotic earns consideration.
Before making your selection, it’s important to understand what you’re wrapping, what your facility constraints are, and how each machine mechanically operates. From there, vendor proposals and site references can be evaluated based on merit. The rest is execution.
Not Sure Which Stretch Wrapper Is Right for You?
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