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If you move aggregates—sand, gravel, crushed stone, limestone, recycled base, slag, blends—then you already know the ugly truth: your product is heavy, abrasive, and dusty… and most of the “shipping problems” that show up later don’t come from the rock. They come from the load shifting, the layers drifting, the corners crushing, the wrap tearing, and the pallet turning into a wobbly mess that costs you time, labor, claims, and repeat business.
That’s why Aggregates Chipboard Pads matter.
They’re not glamorous. They’re not complicated. They’re not something you post on Instagram.
But they are one of the fastest ways to turn a sloppy, failure-prone pallet into a stable, repeatable shipment that arrives clean(er), stacks better, unloads faster, and causes fewer headaches for everybody involved.
Let’s keep it real.
If you’ve shipped aggregates for more than ten minutes, you’ve seen at least one of these:
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a pallet leaning like it’s tired
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bags drifting outward layer by layer
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crushed corners on cartons or gaylords
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wrap torn to shreds from rubbing
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dust and fines all over the deck
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a load that “looked fine” leaving your dock… then arrived looking questionable
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rewrap labor at the last minute
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repalletization because the base wasn’t stable
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customers complaining about mess and instability
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carriers blaming shippers, shippers blaming carriers, everyone wasting time
And the frustrating part is this:
Most of those issues are not random.
They’re physics.
Heavy loads + vibration + time + uneven support = failure.
Chipboard pads are a cheap, simple way to beat that physics.
What Are Aggregates Chipboard Pads?
Chipboard pads are flat sheets made from compressed paperboard—smooth, consistent, and designed to be used in palletizing and packaging to:
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level uneven layers
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increase friction between layers
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distribute compression forces
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protect labels and packaging surfaces
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create cleaner interfaces between product and pallet surfaces
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reduce layer drift and pallet creep
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improve wrap and strap performance
In the aggregate world, chipboard pads typically get used as:
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tier sheets between layers
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top sheets under wrap or straps
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bottom sheets between product and pallet deck
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separation pads between different products on mixed pallets
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load stabilizers for bag stacks and bulk boxes
If corrugated sheets are the “stiff armor,” chipboard pads are the “slick, consistent layer” that makes the load behave better.
And with aggregates, load behavior is everything.
Why Chipboard Pads Work So Well for Aggregates
Because aggregate shipments often involve one of these packaging formats:
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small sacks stacked on pallets (common in landscaping / retail supply)
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bulk bags / super sacks on pallets
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bulk boxes / gaylords on pallets
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mixed loads including aggregate product plus other materials
And in every format, the same thing happens over time:
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layers settle
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vibration makes them drift
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pressure points crush edges
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wrap stretches and loosens
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and suddenly the pallet becomes unstable
Chipboard pads help stabilize the stack by creating:
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a consistent layer surface
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better load distribution
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better friction characteristics
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and less “random” deformation
When you remove randomness, you remove problems.
The Hidden Enemy: Pallet Deck Gaps
Wood pallets are not perfect.
They have:
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gaps
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knots
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warped boards
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uneven decks
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broken boards
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splinters
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and all kinds of grime depending on their life history
When you place heavy aggregate product directly on pallet boards, you create pressure points.
Pressure points cause:
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sagging
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deformation
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bottom layer stress
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edge crush
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instability
A bottom chipboard pad helps by smoothing out those deck gaps and distributing force more evenly.
That means:
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fewer bottom-layer failures
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more stable pallets
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better overall load integrity
For heavy product, that’s a big deal.
The “Pallet Creep” Problem (And Why Chipboard Helps)
Pallet creep is when the load slowly migrates outward during transit.
It happens because:
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vibration reduces friction
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layers settle and shift
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corners push outward
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wrap tries to hold it but stretches over time
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and the footprint expands until the load is bulging and leaning
Chipboard pads can reduce creep by:
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creating more consistent layer interfaces
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flattening surfaces
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reducing “uneven layer behavior”
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improving overall stacking stability
It’s not magic. It’s just good stacking physics.
And it makes a difference.
Where Aggregates Chipboard Pads Are Used Most
1) Small bag stacks (the #1 chipboard use case)
If you stack 50 lb aggregate bags, you already know the pain:
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bags deform
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layers become uneven
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the load looks like a pyramid
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wrap tears
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layers drift
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pallets lean
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customers hate unloading
Chipboard pads between layers help create flatter layers and reduce bag deformation.
The result:
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straighter stacks
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better wrap containment
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fewer leaning pallets
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faster unload
2) Bulk boxes / gaylords of aggregates
Bulk boxes need stable bases.
Chipboard pads help:
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reduce pressure points
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improve stability
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reduce bottom deformation
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improve wrap and strap performance
3) Mixed pallets going to yards and job sites
Chipboard pads can separate products and reduce abrasion and rubbing damage on mixed loads.
4) Top sheets under straps
If you strap aggregate shipments, strap bite is real.
A top chipboard pad spreads strap pressure and reduces crushing and scarring.
Chipboard Pads vs Corrugated Sheets for Aggregates
Here’s the straight answer:
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Corrugated is usually stiffer and better for heavier layer support.
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Chipboard is smoother, more uniform, and great for leveling and separation.
In many aggregate operations, the best setup is:
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chipboard for consistent tier layering
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corrugated when you need more stiffness and load distribution
But you don’t need to guess.
You choose based on the problem you’re solving:
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if layers are uneven and drifting: chipboard
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if you need more stiffness and support: corrugated
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if you need both: use both strategically
The “Five-Second Receiving Test” Still Applies
Even in aggregates, customers judge shipments fast.
They ask:
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is this stable?
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is this safe to unload?
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is this going to spill?
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is this going to require cleanup?
A pallet built with chipboard pads tends to arrive:
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flatter
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more square
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less bulgy
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more controlled
That makes receiving easier.
And easy receiving means repeat orders.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
The Real ROI: Chipboard Pads Save You from Rework
Most companies don’t realize how much money they burn on “last-minute fixes.”
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rewrap after building pallets
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repalletize because a layer shifted
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restack because a pallet is leaning
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rebox damaged cartons
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replace torn wrap
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cleanup dust and spillage from unstable stacks
Chipboard pads reduce those fixes.
And when you reduce fixes, you reduce labor.
Labor is expensive.
Chipboard is cheap.
That’s why the ROI is usually obvious once you’re shipping volume.
The Most Common Mistakes with Chipboard Pads in Aggregate Shipments
Mistake #1: Using pads that are too small
If pads don’t cover the layer footprint, edges still crush and drift still happens.
Mistake #2: Using pads too infrequently
One pad somewhere isn’t a program.
If you need stabilization, build it into SOP.
Mistake #3: Using pads inconsistently
If “who built the pallet” determines whether pads were used, outcomes will vary.
Mistake #4: Only using a top pad
Top pads help. But bottom and tier pads often matter more because the failure starts at the base and grows upward.
Mistake #5: Thinking pads can fix bad stacking
Pads help, but you still need:
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proper layer patterns
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balanced weight distribution
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consistent wrap/strap SOP
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decent pallet quality
Pads are a booster, not a miracle.
A Simple SOP for Chipboard Pads in Aggregate Operations
Here are three simple SOPs that work:
SOP A: Small bag stacks (most common)
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bottom pad
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chipboard pad between every layer (or every 2 layers depending on height and lane severity)
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top pad
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standard wrap method
SOP B: Bulk boxes / gaylords
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bottom pad
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top pad
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wrap or strap method as required
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optional tier pad if stacking multiple units (site dependent)
SOP C: Rough lanes / LTL / multi-touch shipping
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bottom pad
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more frequent tier pads
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top pad
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corner protection if needed
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stronger wrap method
You don’t need fancy.
You need repeatable.
Repeatable shipments are what make aggregates profitable.
When Chipboard Pads Are Absolutely Worth It
Chipboard pads pay for themselves when you have:
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leaning pallets
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drifting layers
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crushed edges
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torn wrap
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frequent rewrap labor
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receiving complaints
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mixed loads that rub and scuff
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LTL shipping with many touches
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customers that demand clean staging and safe unload
If you’re experiencing any of those, chipboard pads are one of the fastest fixes you can deploy.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
How to Quote Aggregates Chipboard Pads Fast
To quote properly, we need:
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pallet size (48×40 or other)
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what you’re shipping (small bags, bulk bags, bulk boxes, mixed loads)
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whether you want bottom pads, tier pads, top pads, or all
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average pallet weight
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layers per pallet (if small bags)
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shipping method (FTL vs LTL)
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monthly pallet count (or pad usage estimate)
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what’s currently going wrong (leaning, drift, rewrap, claims)
If you don’t know everything, that’s fine.
Tell us:
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pallet size
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shipment format
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and your biggest headache right now
We’ll recommend the pad footprint and usage pattern that fixes the failure.
Why Custom Packaging Products for Aggregate Chipboard Pads
Because aggregates don’t need “any pad.”
They need:
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correct footprint coverage
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consistent thickness and performance
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bulk pricing
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reliable supply
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and a pad program that actually stabilizes loads
We supply chipboard pads at volume so aggregate pallets arrive flatter, tighter, and easier to handle—without the recurring cycle of rewrap, restack, and complaints.
Bottom Line
Aggregates are heavy.
Heavy loads punish sloppy pallets.
Chipboard pads are one of the simplest ways to:
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stabilize layers
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reduce pallet creep
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reduce crush and deformation
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improve wrap/strap performance
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reduce labor rework
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reduce claims
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and make receiving easier
If you ship aggregates and want pallets that arrive controlled instead of questionable, chipboard pads are a simple fix with huge upside.
If you want bulk pricing and the right pad footprint for your aggregate shipments, reach out.