Why the Right Flexo Press Choice Matters
Selecting the wrong flexo printing machine is one of the most expensive mistakes a flexible packaging printer can make. This guide walks through every key decision factor — print width, substrate compatibility, drive system, color configuration, and total cost of ownership.
Step 1: Define Your Substrate and Application
Film Substrates (BOPP, PET, PE, CPP)
Thin film substrates demand precise tension control. CI flexo presses excel here because the central drum provides continuous substrate support throughout all print stations.
Recommended: Gearless CI Flexo Press (Master Series)
Paper and Corrugated Substrates
Paper is less sensitive to tension variation but demands consistent ink transfer. Both servo CI flexo and stack flexo presses are viable.
Recommended: Servo CI Flexo (King Series) or Stack Flexo (Honor Series)
Step 2: Determine Your Print Width Requirements
- 600–800 mm: Short-run labels, narrow flexible packaging
- 1000–1200 mm: Mid-range packaging, standard film widths
- 1400–1600 mm: Wide-format flexible packaging, FFS films
- 1800–2200 mm: Industrial-scale production, high-volume runs
Always buy 10–15% more print width than your current largest order. Growth orders should not require another machine purchase within 3 years.
Step 3: Choose the Right Drive System
Gearless (Electronic Shaft) Drive
Each print unit is driven by an independent servo motor. No mechanical gears connect print cylinders, eliminating gear-pitch error — the primary cause of registration inconsistency.
Best for: High-resolution graphics, fine halftone printing, food and pharmaceutical packaging.
Servo-Gear Drive
Each print unit uses a servo motor through a precision gear system. Improved accuracy over traditional gear drives at a lower investment than gearless.
Best for: Mid-tier packaging converters seeking production speed without gearless premium.
Stack Flexo
Print units stacked vertically. Simpler mechanically but less precise than CI configurations.
Best for: Paper labels, simple bag printing, short runs with less demanding registration.
Step 4: Color Count Configuration
- 4 colors: Entry-level label and simple packaging work
- 6 colors: Standard flexible packaging with process and spot colors
- 8 colors: Premium food and consumer goods packaging
- 10+ colors: Specialty cosmetic and pharmaceutical packaging
Step 5: Speed vs. Quality Comparison
| Press Type | Max Speed | Registration | Best Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gearless CI Flexo | 400–500 m/min | ±0.05 mm | High-volume film, premium labels |
| Servo CI Flexo | 250–350 m/min | ±0.1 mm | Paper, mid-tier film packaging |
| Stack Flexo | 100–150 m/min | ±0.2–0.3 mm | Short runs, paper labels, bags |
Step 6: Calculate Total Cost of Ownership
Purchase price is a poor proxy for true cost. Over a 10-year press life, consider consumables, waste, downtime, energy, and operator labor. Gearless presses typically have higher purchase costs but lower 10-year TCO due to reduced waste and faster setup.
Conclusion
The best flexo press matches your substrate, volume, quality targets, and growth trajectory. LISHG Machinery offers the Master (gearless CI), King (servo CI), and Honor (stack) series to cover all three segments. Contact our engineering team to match your production profile to the right configuration.

