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P 01<\/span><\/p>\nHow does Mexico City altitude (2,240m) affect ZQ80 IBM chiller and compressed air performance?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Mexico City\u2019s altitude of 2,240m above sea level reduces both chiller capacity and compressed air density relative to sea level, requiring Korea Ever-Power altitude-compensated specifications for ZQ80 auxiliary equipment at Mexico City IBM production facilities. Chiller performance at altitude: air-cooled chiller capacity decreases approximately 3-4% per 300m altitude increase above sea level due to lower air density reducing heat rejection from the chiller condenser. At 2,240m Mexico City altitude, a standard sea-level-rated chiller loses approximately 20-25% capacity \u2014 meaning a 15kW sea-level chiller delivers only 11-12kW effective cooling at Mexico City altitude. Korea Ever-Power specifies ZQ80 auxiliary chiller for Mexico City IBM installations at 20-25% higher nominal capacity than standard Korean installation \u2014 the Mexican customer\u2019s ZQ80 uses an 18kW chiller (versus 15kW standard) to maintain 14\u00b0C mould cooling water throughout Mexico City summer (25-28\u00b0C ambient) production. Compressed air at altitude: Mexico City compressed air at 2,240m altitude has approximately 25% lower density than sea level, meaning a sea-level-rated 7 bar compressor delivers only ~5.2 bar effective pressure at Mexico City altitude without pressure compensation. ZQ80 blow pressure specification at 7.8 bar for the Mexican customer requires a compressed air supply at 9-10 bar pressure at the ZQ80 inlet after altitude derating. Korea Ever-Power recommends the Mexican customer specify their ZQ80 plant air supply compressor for 10 bar Mexico City delivery pressure to ensure ZQ80 requires 7.8 bar blow pressure overhead. Korea Ever-Power\u2019s Mexico City commissioning engineer verifies both chiller cooling performance and compressed air pressure at the Mexican customer\u2019s facility elevation before ZQ80 IBM production qualification.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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P 02<\/span><\/p>\nCan the Mexican customer use Braskem or US-origin HDPE instead of Indelpro for USMCA compliance?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Yes \u2014 both Braskem-origin HDPE (from Brazil, not North American origin) and US-origin HDPE qualify differently for USMCA rules of origin analysis. US-origin HDPE: US-produced HDPE (Chevron Phillips, ExxonMobil Chemical, LyondellBasell US grades) imported into Mexico for ZQ80 IBM production is North American-origin resin satisfying USMCA tariff shift rules \u2014 US HDPE into Mexico IBM production = USMCA qualifying North American origin for finished IBM container. US HDPE into Mexico may benefit from 0% USMCA import duty between US and Mexico on HDPE resin import (HS Chapter 39 resins). Braskem Brazil HDPE: Braskem-origin HDPE (not North American origin) used in Mexican ZQ80 IBM production does not satisfy USMCA rules of origin tariff shift requirement for HDPE (Chapter 39) to container (Chapter 39, same chapter \u2014 tariff shift must cross chapters or meet RVC requirement). Brazilian HDPE in Mexican IBM container would not generate USMCA certificate of origin for US export \u2014 the Mexican customer would need to use North American (Mexican Indelpro, US-origin) HDPE to qualify ZQ80 IBM sports bottles for USMCA US export. Korea Ever-Power recommends the Mexican customer confirm USMCA origin analysis with a Mexican-US customs attorney before committing to resin sourcing strategy for US export IBM programmes on ZQ80 \u2014 the USMCA rules of origin for plastic containers from non-North American resin depend on the specific tariff heading and RVC (regional value content) percentage calculation that the Mexican customer\u2019s transaction value supports.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Pitanje 03<\/span><\/p>\nCan ZQ80 add 500ml HDPE IBM for the growing Mexican functional beverage market alongside 400ml?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Yes \u2014 ZQ80 handles 500ml HDPE IBM at 6 cavities (reduced from 8 cavities at 400ml due to higher preform weight per cavity at 500ml \u2014 500ml HDPE IBM preform at approximately 38g per bottle x 6 cavities = 228g total shot, within ZQ80\u2019s 466g maximum). ZQ80 500ml HDPE IBM output: approximately 4,200-4,800 bottles\/hour at 6 cavities, 4.5-5.0s cycle at the Mexican facility. The 500ml format would require a new mould set (injection cavity height extended for taller 500ml preform, new core rod, new blow mould) \u2014 the same ZQ80 machine accepts the 500ml mould set within the ZQ80 platen clearance specifications confirmed by Korea Ever-Power at 500ml format check for the Mexican customer\u2019s ZQ80 platen size. Functional beverage 500ml IBM specification for Mexican market: 38mm or 43mm wide-mouth flip-top neck for Mexican functional beverage brands using sports flip-top closures from Mexican and US closure suppliers; HDPE natural or pigmented with brand colour masterbatch; wall 1.2-1.4mm for 500ml sports bottle drop performance at 1.5m filled drop. Korea Ever-Power recommends the Mexican customer confirm the 500ml format specification with their Mexican and US brand customers before ordering the 500ml ZQ80 mould set \u2014 neck finish compatibility between the 400ml loop cap neck and the 500ml flip-top neck should be reviewed at mould set order to maximise shared injection cavity tooling between the two sports bottle formats on ZQ80.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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P 04<\/span><\/p>\nWhat Mexican import duty applies to Korea Ever-Power ZQ80?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Korea Ever-Power ZQ80 import into Mexico is classified under Mexican LIGIE (Ley de Impuestos Generales de Importaci\u00f3n y Exportaci\u00f3n) tariff fraction 8477.10.01 (injection moulding machines for plastics processing). Mexico\u2019s general import tariff for plastic processing machinery under fraction 8477.10.01 is 0% under Mexico\u2019s unilateral tariff liberalisation for capital goods machinery \u2014 Mexico maintains 0% general import duty on plastic processing equipment to support Mexican manufacturing investment under Mexico\u2019s industrial policy. Korean-origin ZQ80 does not benefit from any Mexico-Korea FTA (no bilateral FTA exists as of current period), but 0% general tariff applies regardless of origin for this machinery classification. Mexico VAT (IVA) at 16% applies on the CIF-Mexico value (Manzanillo or Veracruz port CIF plus 0% import duty) \u2014 recoverable as IVA input credit against Mexican IVA output on IBM container sales. The Mexican customer should verify the current fraction 8477.10.01 tariff rate with an agente aduanal (Mexican customs broker) at time of ZQ80 import, as Mexican tariff fractions and rates are subject to annual review in the LIGIE updates published by SAT (Servicio de Administraci\u00f3n Tributaria).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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P 05<\/span><\/p>\nHow does Korea Ever-Power commission ZQ80 at high-altitude Mexican facilities?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Korea Ever-Power\u2019s commissioning procedure for ZQ80 at high-altitude Mexican facilities (Mexico City 2,240m, Puebla 2,135m) includes altitude-specific qualification steps not required at sea-level installations. Altitude qualification steps at Mexico City ZQ80 commissioning: compressed air pressure verification at ZQ80 blow pressure inlet (must read 9-10 bar plant supply for ZQ80 to achieve 7.8 bar blow pressure specification at 2,240m altitude \u2014 Korea Ever-Power commissioning engineer verifies and documents actual blow pressure achieved at Mexican facility air supply before accepting IBM quality); chiller cooling water temperature verification at ZQ80 mould inlet (14\u00b0C target with altitude-compensated chiller \u2014 commissioning engineer verifies mould water temperature with calibrated thermocouple at injection mould and blow mould cooling water inlets during 2-hour stable production run); barrel temperature calibration against Korean reference standard (ZQ80 barrel thermocouple readings may vary \u00b15\u00b0C from Korean reference at Mexican altitude due to thermocouple response differences at Mexican altitude barometric pressure \u2014 commissioning engineer calibrates ZQ80 barrel temperatures against external calibrated thermocouple reference at Mexican facility and adjusts ZQ80 HMI barrel set points to achieve target polymer melt temperature within \u00b12\u00b0C). Full IBM quality qualification (100 consecutive shots per cavity, neck OD, weight, visual inspection) is performed after all altitude-specific process parameter adjustments are confirmed and documented. Korea Ever-Power\u2019s Mexico City commissioning report includes altitude adjustment documentation for the Mexican customer\u2019s QMS records.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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P 06<\/span><\/p>\nWhat decoration options does the Mexican customer use for 400ml HDPE IBM sports bottle brand differentiation?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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The Mexican customer decorates 400ml HDPE IBM sports bottles for Mexican brand customers using two primary decoration methods aligned with Mexican sports packaging retail requirements. Shrink sleeve: the primary decoration method for OXXO and Mexican gym channel 400ml sports bottles \u2014 full-body PET or OPS heat-shrink sleeve (45-55 micron) applied over the HDPE IBM bottle at 90-95\u00b0C steam shrink tunnel at the Mexican customer\u2019s decoration line. Full-body shrink sleeve allows photographic-quality sports brand artwork at OXXO retail shelf at lower unit decoration cost than pad print or hot stamp for high-volume Mexican sports drink SKUs. Sleeve registration around the ZQ80 grip knurl body pattern: Korea Ever-Power\u2019s ZQ80 blow mould positions the grip knurl in the lower 80mm body zone below the sleeve decoration panel, maintaining the knurl texture visible and tactile below the sleeve while the brand artwork panel above the knurl carries full-body sleeve print. Direct screen print for Mexican gym supplement brands: Mexican gym channel supplement brands at specialized nutrition retail (GNC Mexico, Bfit, Nutrisa gym supplement section) specify direct UV screen print on HDPE IBM body for premium tactile brand presentation without sleeve. HDPE IBM surface requires corona pre-treatment to 44-46 mN\/m for UV screen print ink adhesion. The Mexican customer operates a 2-colour UV screen print line for direct-print HDPE IBM sports bottle SKUs at 3,000-4,000 bottles\/hour print speed, with BPA-free, food contact safe UV inks specified for Mexican sports beverage contact use at HDPE IBM container surface.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/section>\nKorea Ever-Power ZQ80 auxiliary equipment package at the Mexican customer facility \u2014 altitude-compensated 18kW chiller (20-25% higher capacity for Mexico City 2,240m altitude) for 14\u00b0C mould cooling water, Indelpro HDPE 60055E auto loader with 80\u00b0C hopper dryer, and output conveyor with 38mm snap bead OD gauge station for 100% loop cap neck dimension verification. Korea Ever-Power\u2019s Mexico City commissioning engineer configures both chiller and compressed air specifications for Mexican altitude before ZQ80 IBM production qualification.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n
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MEXICO IBM MACHINE ENQUIRY \u00b7 KOREA EVER-POWER<\/p>\n
Planning HDPE IBM Production for Mexican and USMCA Markets?<\/h2>\n Korea Ever-Power provides EP-ZQ80 IBM machines with altitude-compensated auxiliary specification, Indelpro HDPE IBM pre-validation, USMCA origin documentation support, 220V\/60Hz Mexican electrical configuration and COFEPRIS\/FDA food contact compliance for Mexican sports bottle and beverage IBM programmes.<\/p>\n
Request Mexico IBM Consultation \u2192<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n <\/p>\n
Urednik: Cxm<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"CASE STUDY \u00b7 MEXICO \u00b7 ZQ80 IBM \u00b7 400ML HDPE SPORTS BOTTLE \u00b7 KOREA EVER-POWER IBM Machine in Mexico: ZQ80 \u2014 400ml HDPE Tall Sports Bottle Case Study A Mexican sports and beverage packaging manufacturer selected the Korea Ever-Power EP-ZQ80 injection blow molding machine for 400ml HDPE tall sports bottle with loop cap production supplying […]<\/p>","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_et_pb_use_builder":"","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[24],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1161","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-technical-deep-dive"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/bs\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1161","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/bs\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/bs\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/bs\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/bs\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1161"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/bs\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1161\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1175,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/bs\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1161\/revisions\/1175"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/bs\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1161"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/bs\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1161"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/bs\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1161"}],"curies":[{"name":"radni list","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}