shrink wrap machines,shrink wrapping machines, tabletop shrink wrap machines
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Shrink Wrapping Machines
Fully & Semi automatic various shrink wrapping machines. Wrapping shall be made with PC, PVC or Poliolephin materials with or without carton flats. (Bottles, boxes, paper, etc.)
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Shink Wrap Machines Technical Details
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Shrink Machine PNKS 2400
Type PNKS 2400 is suitable for packaging textile fabric rolls. Semi and Fully Automated models are available.

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PACKAGING MACHINERY IN TURKEY
Turkey has a population of over 67 million and an annual growth rate of about 1.57 percent. The increase in the population and living standards
, rapid urbanization, changing consumption patterns and the increase in women in business all result in higher demand for packaging products.As a result the Turkish packaging industry has grown rapidly over the past 10 years and has now become a huge sector. The growth of the sector reflects changing shopping habits, particularly in the large cities with their supermarkets, department stores and hypermarkets. Increased advertisement of consumer products, attractive point-of-purchase packaging and the boom in sales of canned and frozen food, apparel, and disposable medical supplies, all of which require specialty packaging, are other factors for the expanding packaging sector.
Turkey produces all types of packaging materials and packaging products such as paper, cardboard, wrapping film, tape, plastics, glass, metals and wood. The annual consumption of packaging is about 2.7 million tons. The breakdown of packaging products consumption in Turkey is 37% for paper, carton, corrugated board and foil, 22% for metals, 20% for plastics, 13% for wood, 8% for glass.
Turkey is an exporting country; the value of its export products reached about 35 million US dollars in 2002. More than half of exports goes to the EU which has high packing norms and standards.
All these developments have resulted in a large packaging sector and a considerable demand for packaging machinery. At present the Turkish packaging machinery sector meets domestic demand and has a remarkable capacity for exports.
The Turkish packaging machinery industry produces every kind of machinery and equipment required for the packaging industry and all the parts and accessories thereof. Cleaning and drying machinery, can-sealing, container labeling, vacuum or gas packaging machines, machinery for filling, closing, sealing, labeling of bottles, cans, bags, boxes, machinery for opening, filling and closing bags, packing or wrapping machinery-including heatshrink types, weighing and labeling equipment, machines for making bags and sacks and machines for making cartons, boxes, cases or similar containers are the main packaging machinery and equipment in Turkey. The majority of packaging machinery and equipment manufacturers in Turkey range from small to medium sized companies mainly located in Istanbul.
Today, many Turkish packaging machinery manufacturers/exporters follow European and international standards and norms. Companies exporting to the European Union affix the “CE Mark” under the “New Approach” Directives.
The obligation to affix the “CE Mark” was also initiated within the Turkish market in 2002.
EXPORTS
The Turkish packaging machinery sector largely meets the demand of the Turkish packaging sector and has recently concentrated on exports.
Turkish packaging machinery industry exports were only 8 thousand US dollars in 1996. In 2002, total exports of the Turkish packaging machinery rose to 15.7 million US dollars.
Turkish packaging machinery was exported to about 90 countries in 2002. The major markets for packaging machinery were Romania, Egypt, Italy, the Russian Federation, Germany, Iran, Greece, Israel, the United Arab Emirates, Syria and the Czech Republic.
The products of the Turkish packaging machinery industry are exhibited in international and national fairs organised in Turkey. In 2003, major fairs that will be organised in this sector are:
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Export Promotion Center of Turkey – IGEME 2003
SOME BEAUTY FROM TURKEY

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Sillyon/Ancient Cities
About 35 km. along the Antalya-Alanya highway, you turn north and
continue 8 km. until Silyon is reached. It was built on an
ellipse-shaped table-like plateau rising above the flat plain.
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This
Pamphylian town, located between Perge and Aspendos, is situated on top of a
flat-topped hill with almost vertical flanks. With its unusual physical
formation, the hill is easily recognizable even from a distance. Strabo
mentions in his writings that the city, some 40 stad or 7.2 km, inland, was
visible from Perge.
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It is generally accepted that Sillyon, like other cities in Pamphylia, was founded after the Trojan War by the heroes Mopsos and Calchas. A statue base found in Sillyon bears Mopsos' name.
Sillyon began to mint coinage in its own name in the third century B.C. On these coins the name of the city was written as Sylviys, which must have been changed to Sillyon in the Roman era.
The name Sillyon is almost never mentioned in history except, for its appearance in Arrianos' notes on the campaigns of Alexander the Great. These notes indicate that the reaction of Sillyon's residents to Alexander was hostile, in contrast to that of Perge, and that they defended themselves from a strong position, relying on mercenaries as well as soldiers. In any case it appears that Sillyon had been a military base since Persian times; the remains of buildings and fortifications from the Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine and Seljuk epochs reveal that the city preserved its military character for a long time.
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Climbing a simple path from Yanköy toward the hill, the first thing one encounters is the lower gate. Consisting of a horseshoe-shaped court with two rectangular towers. It is similar to Perge's Hellenistic gate in its plan and masonry. On this basis it has been dated to the third century B.C.
Because Sillyon is situated on a steep-sided hill, there was no need to surround the city with walls. It was only in the west and south-west sections where the incline is at its slightest, that walls, towers, and ramparts were erected. These exhibit painstaking stonework and considerable technical expertise.
The
city's oldest ruins lie north-east of the main entrance gate. The first
structure one encounters here is a two-storey, high-walled building from the
Byzantine era; although it is in good condition, its function has not yet been
ascertained. At the end of its lies one of Sillyon's most important
structures, a 7x55 metre palaestra of Hellenistic date. On its west wall are
ten windows of differing dimensions. A little further on is a small
Hellenistic building with an elegant door and carefully executed masonry. The
building's fame is derived from an inscription written on the door in the
local Pamphylian dialect. The inscription, thirty lines in length, is the
longest and most important document in this dealect known today. It is a pity
that a portion of the inscription was lost when a hole was made in the door at
a later date. While the dialect, written in Greek characters, was used in a
large part of Pamphylian until the first century A.D., it was gradually
forgotten after that date and was replaced by Greek.
At the southern edge of the plateau one encounters a sad scene. The Sillyon
theatre and the odeon beside it, described as being in an excellent state of
preservation in the 1884 Pamphylian travel notes of the Austrian researcher
Lanckoronski, disappeared down the hill in a landslide in 1969; only eleven
rows of seats from the cavea were left in place.
Immediately after the theatre, rock-cut stairs with balustrades along the sides lead to Hellenistic houses of square or rectangular plan constructed in the meticulous stonework typical of that period. Going east, one sees a small Hellenistic temple. Rising above a podium measuring 7.30x11.00 metres, the temple's cella wall and stylobate are still standing. According to existing architectural remains, the temple was of the Doric prostyle type.
From the beginning of the thirteenth century the Seljuks settled in Sillyon in small groups, just as they did in certain other cities. In accordance with their custom they built a small, thin-walled, crenelated citadel on the acropolis. The most interesting building that has survived from the Seljuk period is a square, domed mosque in the north-west part of the acropolis.
Other than a few Byzantine and Seljuk buildings there are no important remains at the eastern end of the acropolis. On returning to the village from the upper gate, one passes a necropolis area consisting of simple graves, before arriving at a well preserved tower. Square in plan, the tower has two floors, with a door opening into the lower one. Doors on the upper level placed there for defensive purposes open onto the ramparts. The stadium is on a terrace south-west of the tower. It is in very poor condition; all that remains are the tiers of seats mounted on vaults running along its western length.
There could not have been enough springs in the area to ensure an adequate water supply, since it is clear that importance was given to the construction of covered and open cisterns from the Hellenistic period onward.
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