BLOG

Home > Blog > Buyer's Guides
Buyer's Guides March 19, 2026 SUHUI Machinery

How to Choose a Plastic Film Washing Line: A Complete Buyer’s Guide

Plastic film waste — from agricultural mulch and greenhouse covers to industrial stretch wrap and LDPE packaging — is one of the most challenging materials to recycle. Unlike rigid plastics, film is lightweight, easily contaminated, and prone to tangling in standard machinery. Choosing the wrong washing line can mean chronic downtime, poor-quality output, and a return on investment that never materializes.

This guide breaks down everything a recycling plant operator or equipment buyer needs to evaluate before purchasing a PP PE plastic film washing line: input material types, required capacity, contamination levels, output quality standards, and the right questions to ask any manufacturer.

If you are also looking for a technical overview of how the equipment works, see: How to Choose a Plastic Film Recycling Line: Process, Equipment and Key Considerations →

1. Understand Your Input Material First

No two film washing lines are identical because no two waste streams are identical. Before comparing equipment, you need a clear picture of exactly what you are feeding into the machine.

Film Type

Polypropylene (PP) and polyethylene (PE) films are chemically distinct and may require different processing parameters — particularly melt temperatures during the downstream pelletizing stage. Confirm whether your feedstock is predominantly PP, LDPE, LLDPE, HDPE film, or a mixed blend, and specify this to any manufacturer you approach.

Contamination Profile

This is the single most important variable in sizing a film washing line. Common contaminants include:

  • Soil, sand, and stones (agricultural film)
  • Adhesive labels and printing inks (post-consumer packaging)
  • Moisture and organic residue (food-contact film)
  • Metal fragments (industrial scrap)
  • Other plastic types (PET, PVC mixed in with PP/PE bales)

Heavy soil contamination — typical of agricultural mulch film — demands a more aggressive pre-washing and friction-washing stage compared to relatively clean post-industrial stretch wrap. A line designed for clean industrial film will underperform severely if fed with muddy agricultural film.

Contaminated agricultural plastic mulch film waste ready for recycling

Form Factor: Loose vs. Baled

Is your input material loose and fluffy, or compressed into bales? Baled material requires a bale breaker or shredder as the first stage. Confirm whether the manufacturer includes this in the quoted line or whether it is a separate, additional cost.

Compressed plastic film bales prepared for washing line processing

2. Define Your Required Output Quality

What does your cleaned and dried film flake need to look like? Output quality requirements drive the entire line configuration.

For In-House Pelletizing

If you plan to feed the washed flake directly into a pelletizer or compactor-granulator on the same site, the primary requirements are moisture content (typically below 3–5%) and the absence of hard contaminants that could damage the screw and barrel. A standard hot-wash and friction-drying system will generally meet these requirements.

For Sale to Third-Party Processors

If you intend to sell washed flake to a downstream buyer, you will likely need to meet stricter purity and moisture specifications — sometimes below 1% moisture and above 99% purity. This may require additional stages such as a centrifugal dryer, thermal dryer, or optical sorting unit.

For Food-Contact Recycled Content

Food-grade output demands hot caustic washing (typically at 80–90 °C with sodium hydroxide solution), extended rinse cycles, and documented process validation. Not all manufacturers offer food-grade-compliant line designs; confirm this requirement from the outset.

Clean recycled plastic film flakes output after washing and drying

3. Match Capacity to Your Actual Throughput

Film washing line capacity is typically quoted in kilograms per hour (kg/h) of input material. Common commercial configurations range from 300 kg/h to 3,000 kg/h. Here is how to choose the right size:

Calculate Your Daily Input Volume

Start with how many tonnes of film waste you receive or collect per day, then back-calculate the hourly throughput needed based on your planned operating hours. Build in a 20–30% capacity buffer for peak loads, maintenance downtime, and future business growth.

Do Not Over-Size

A line running at 40% of rated capacity is inefficient — energy costs per kilogram of output increase, and some washing stages (particularly hot-water tanks) may not maintain optimal temperature and agitation levels at low throughput. Match the line closely to your realistic near-term volume.

Modular Expandability

If you expect volume growth, ask manufacturers whether the line is modular — can individual stages (pre-washing, friction washers, centrifugal dryers) be upgraded independently without replacing the entire system?

4. Evaluate the Key Processing Stages

A complete PP PE film washing line typically comprises the following stages. Evaluate each one carefully when comparing supplier quotations.

Industrial PP PE plastic film washing line equipment stages overview

Stage 1 – Pre-Sorting and Size Reduction

Bale breaker, wet granulator or crusher, and a trommel or vibrating screen to remove coarse contaminants (stones, glass, metal). The wet granulator simultaneously shreds and pre-washes film in a single step, which reduces downstream washing load significantly.

Stage 2 – Float-Sink Separation Tank

PP and PE films float; sand, stones, and most non-polyolefin plastics sink. This stage performs a fast, passive separation at low cost. Confirm the tank volume and agitation method — an under-agitated tank leads to carryover of heavy contaminants.

Stage 3 – Friction Washing

High-speed friction washers use mechanical scrubbing action to remove adhered dirt, labels, and organic residue from film surfaces. For heavily contaminated agricultural film, two friction-washing stages in series are standard. For cleaner industrial film, one stage may suffice.

Stage 4 – Hot Washing (Optional but Recommended)

A heated washing tank (60–90 °C) with detergent or caustic solution dissolves adhesives, oils, and food residues that cold washing cannot remove. If your end market requires high-purity output, this stage is essential. Confirm the tank temperature control precision and detergent dosing system.

Stage 5 – Rinsing

At least one clean-water rinse stage after hot washing is required to remove residual detergent before drying.

Stage 6 – Mechanical Drying

A centrifugal dryer or squeeze dryer reduces surface moisture to 10–15%. This is typically followed by a thermal (hot-air) dryer to bring moisture below 3–5% for pelletizing. Confirm the final moisture specification the manufacturer guarantees — not just the dryer type.

PP PE Film Washing Line in Operation

The following video shows a complete SUHUI PP PE soft film recycling washing line running at full capacity, demonstrating the full sequence from shredding and pre-washing through to centrifugal drying:

5. Key Technical Specifications to Compare

When requesting quotations from film washing line manufacturers, ask for — and compare — the following specifications in writing:

  • Throughput capacity (input kg/h at specified contamination rate)
  • Output moisture content (% after final drying stage)
  • Output purity (% polyolefin content in final flake)
  • Total installed power (kW) and estimated energy consumption per tonne of output
  • Fresh water consumption (m³/tonne of input)
  • Wastewater treatment system: is a closed-loop water recycling system included or optional?
  • Footprint dimensions and ceiling height requirements
  • Control system: manual, semi-automatic, or fully automated PLC with remote monitoring?

6. Assess Manufacturer Capability and After-Sales Support

Equipment performance on paper means little without reliable after-sales support. For a capital investment of this scale, evaluate the following:

Factory Audit and Reference Visits

Request the opportunity to visit an installed line in operation — ideally processing the same material type as your intended feedstock. Reputable manufacturers will facilitate this. Be cautious of any supplier who refuses reference visits.

Spare Parts Availability

High-wear components — friction washer blades, centrifugal dryer screens, granulator blades — need to be available quickly. Confirm the supplier holds common spare parts in stock and can ship within 48–72 hours.

Installation and Commissioning Support

Will the manufacturer send engineers for on-site installation and commissioning? What is the commissioning period, and what performance acceptance criteria will be used?

Warranty Terms

A standard warranty for industrial recycling equipment is 12 months on parts and workmanship. Clarify what is covered, what is excluded, and how warranty claims are processed across international shipments.

Industrial plastic recycling factory quality inspection and production floor

7. Questions to Ask Before You Sign the Contract

Use this checklist in your final supplier evaluation:

  1. What is the rated throughput at what specific contamination percentage?
  2. What is the guaranteed output moisture content and purity?
  3. Is a closed-loop water recycling system included, or is it extra cost?
  4. Can I visit a reference installation processing similar material?
  5. What is the lead time from order to delivery?
  6. Who handles customs clearance and freight — supplier or buyer?
  7. What training is provided to our operators?
  8. What is the typical availability of spare parts, and what is the annual spare-parts budget estimate?

Conclusion

Selecting a PP PE plastic film washing line is not a catalogue purchase. The right configuration depends on your specific material stream, output quality target, and production volume — and the right supplier is one who will work with you to engineer a solution to those exact parameters, not simply sell you a standard package. Industry guidance on recyclate quality standards is maintained by organizations such as the Association of Plastic Recyclers (APR), whose design-for-recyclability guidelines many downstream buyers reference when specifying minimum purity thresholds.

At SUHUI Machinery, we design and manufacture complete PP PE soft film recycling washing lines from 300 kg/h to 3,000 kg/h, with configurations for agricultural film, post-consumer packaging film, and post-industrial stretch wrap. Every line is engineered to the buyer’s specific contamination level and output quality requirements, with factory acceptance testing before shipment and on-site commissioning support.

Learn more about the SUHUI PP PE soft film recycling washing line, or contact our engineering team to discuss your project requirements.

Further Reading

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a PP film washing line and a PE film washing line?

PP (polypropylene) and PE (polyethylene) films share similar densities and processing characteristics, so most modern washing lines are designed to process both in a single system. The primary difference lies in the downstream pelletizing stage, where melt temperatures differ slightly. A combined PP PE film washing line is the standard choice for facilities handling mixed polyolefin film waste streams.

How much does a plastic film washing line cost?

Pricing for a complete PP PE film washing line varies significantly based on throughput capacity, contamination tolerance, output quality requirements, and the level of automation. Entry-level lines for clean industrial film at 300–500 kg/h typically start in the range of USD 80,000–150,000, while fully automated lines for heavily contaminated agricultural film at 1,000–2,000 kg/h can range from USD 300,000–600,000 or more. A detailed quotation requires specification of your input material and output requirements.

Can a film washing line process heavily contaminated agricultural mulch film?

Yes, but the line configuration must be specifically designed for high-contamination input. Agricultural mulch film typically carries 20–40% soil and stone contamination by weight, requiring robust pre-sorting, wet granulation, multi-stage friction washing, and extended hot-wash treatment. Lines designed for cleaner post-industrial film are not suitable for agricultural film without significant modification.

What is the typical water consumption of a film washing line?

Fresh water consumption depends on whether a closed-loop water recycling system is installed. Without water recycling, consumption can reach 3–8 m³ per tonne of input material. With a properly designed sedimentation and recirculation system, fresh water consumption can be reduced to 0.5–1.5 m³ per tonne. Water recycling is increasingly a regulatory requirement in many markets and is strongly recommended for operational cost control.

How long does it take to install and commission a film washing line?

For a mid-sized film washing line (500–1,500 kg/h), on-site installation and commissioning typically takes 15–30 days following equipment delivery, assuming civil works (flooring, drainage, electrical supply) are complete. Larger or more complex lines may require 30–45 days. Factor this lead time into your project planning alongside the manufacturing and shipping period, which is typically 60–90 days from order confirmation.