A comprehensive economic analysis released by Nova Products Mfg., Inc. reveals why purchase price fails to predict return on investment in industrial heat-sealing equipment, demonstrating how total cost of ownership determines long-term profitability for manufacturers. The study shows Packet Welding technology achieves sealing rates of 80-85 feet per minute compared to 10-18 feet per minute for impulse, RF, and hot-air systems, creating a 4–8× throughput advantage that allows one Packet Welder to replace three to five legacy machines while reducing labor, floor space, and operating costs.
"Capital equipment decisions are rarely won or lost on purchase price," said Glenn Lippman, President of Nova Products. "What determines whether a heat-sealing investment succeeds is total cost of ownership: throughput per hour, labor structure, maintenance burden, downtime frequency, consumables spend, automation compatibility, and service life." The analysis documents substantial operating cost advantages across multiple dimensions, including maintenance and consumables where annual costs range from $800-$1,400 for Packet Welding compared to $4,000-$70,000 for legacy technologies—a reduction of up to 98%.
Packet Welding systems deliver uptime exceeding 95% with predictable, infrequent service versus constant interruptions with legacy equipment. Unlike RF welding, which emits electromagnetic interference that disrupts PLCs, sensors, and robotics, Packet Welding integrates seamlessly with modern automated systems. Customers report replacing multiple manual sealing positions with single automated Packet Welding systems, often eliminating several to 10+ roles depending on production layout. The technology reliably seals vinyl, vinyl alternatives, printed fabrics, laminates, and sustainable materials without equipment changes, enabling deployments across medical, inflatables, transportation, tent manufacturing, awnings, and large-format graphics industries.
Packet Welding systems are engineered and manufactured in the USA with a standard five-year warranty compared to one or two years for legacy equipment, with service life measured in decades rather than depreciation cycles. When evaluated on total cost per sealed foot—accounting for throughput, labor, maintenance, and downtime—Packet Welding delivers 9-12 month payback and consistently lower operating costs over time. The complete economic analysis, including detailed comparisons and customer case studies, is available at https://www.novaseal.com/press-release/economics-of-packet-welding/.


