Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ): 1 Bale
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If you don’t have a written spec sheet for your used bulk bags…
You don’t have a program.
You have purchases.
And purchases without a spec sheet lead to:
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Mixed sizes
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Variable SWL
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Different loop types
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Inconsistent liners
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Rising defect rates
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Finger-pointing between sites
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Supplier substitution
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Spec drift
An approved spec sheet is your control document.
It protects:
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Your safety margin
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Your fill process
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Your stacking strategy
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Your freight economics
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Your supplier alignment
Without it, everything floats.
With it, everything locks into place.
Let’s walk through exactly how to build one the right way.
Call Or Text Now to Get a Quote: 832-400-1394Step 1: Start With Operational Reality — Not Supplier Inventory
Your spec sheet should reflect:
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Your material
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Your fill weight
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Your handling method
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Your stacking practice
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Your discharge system
Not:
“What the supplier currently has available.”
Build the spec around your needs first.
Supply can be aligned later.
Step 2: Define the Core Structural Requirements
These are the non-negotiables.
They form the backbone of your spec sheet.
1. Exact Dimensions (L x W x H)
Example: 35” x 35” x 50”
Be precise.
Do not say “approximately.”
Include acceptable tolerance range if needed (ex: ±1”).
Size consistency drives:
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Pallet fit
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Stacking stability
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Freight efficiency
2. Safe Working Load (SWL)
Example: Minimum 2,500 lb SWL
Base this on:
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Maximum fill weight
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Desired safety margin (operate at 80–90%)
Never leave SWL unspecified.
It’s the structural foundation.
3. Safety Factor (SF)
Example: Minimum 6:1 multi-trip rated
Even in used programs, you should request original rating where known.
Higher safety factor = more structural margin.
4. Construction Type
Example: U-panel construction
Or: Circular construction
Or: Baffle construction (if required)
Define construction to prevent substitution.
Construction affects:
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Load distribution
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Seam stress
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Stack shape
5. Loop Type and Height
Example: Cross-corner loops, 12” minimum loop height
Or: Side-seam loops
Or: Sleeve lift construction
Include:
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Loop height requirement
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No fraying allowed
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Stitch integrity requirement
Lift loops carry the load.
Be clear.
Step 3: Define Configuration Requirements
Now specify how the bag functions.
6. Top Style
Choose one:
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Duffle top
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Spout top (specify diameter and length)
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Open top
Example: 16” diameter fill spout, 18” length, tie cord included.
Match to your fill equipment.
7. Bottom Style
Choose one:
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Flat bottom
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Discharge spout (specify diameter and length)
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Diaper bottom
Example: 18” discharge spout, 18” length, tie closure required.
Match to your discharge system.
Step 4: Define Liner Requirements (If Applicable)
If liners are required, specify:
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New or used liner
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Thickness (ex: 4 mil)
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Type (form-fit, lay-flat)
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Anti-static requirement (if applicable)
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Food-grade requirement (if applicable)
Example: New 4 mil form-fit polyethylene liner required.
Do not simply say “liner included.”
Be precise.
Step 5: Define Grade Standards
This is where many companies fail.
Write your grade definition clearly.
Example:
Grade A Definition:
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No structural seam separation
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No lift loop fraying
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No UV brittleness
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No patch repairs
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Cosmetic wear acceptable
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No odor
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No residue
Grade B (if allowed):
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Minor cosmetic wear
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Structurally sound
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No seam separation
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Loops intact
Define acceptable defect tolerance.
Example: Maximum 2% structural defect rate per shipment.
Without written grade definition, drift begins.
Step 6: Define Prior Content Restrictions
State acceptable prior streams.
Example: Acceptable prior contents:
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Resin
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Agricultural materials
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Mineral materials
Not acceptable:
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Hazardous chemicals
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Waste streams
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Unknown streams
Transparency protects you.
Step 7: Define Storage and Handling Requirements
Specify:
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Indoor storage only
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Protected from UV exposure
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No prolonged outdoor exposure
Even used bags must be stored correctly before shipment.
Step 8: Define Bale and Freight Specifications
Include:
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Bags per bale
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Bale compression standard
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Pallet configuration
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Protective wrapping required
This ensures freight math remains consistent.
Step 9: Define Inspection Procedure
Your spec sheet should include:
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Receiving inspection checklist
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Loop inspection criteria
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Seam inspection criteria
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Liner inspection criteria
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Dimension spot-check process
Create consistency across facilities.
Step 10: Include Substitution Policy
This is critical.
Add a clause:
“No substitution of construction, SWL, liner type, loop type, or dimensions without written approval.”
This prevents quiet drift.
Step 11: Assign Revision Control
At the top of your spec sheet include:
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Version number
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Date issued
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Revision date
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Approval signature
Track changes formally.
Untracked revisions become drift.
Step 12: Align Approved Suppliers to the Spec
Once spec sheet is complete:
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Send to supplier.
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Require written acknowledgment.
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Attach to blanket PO.
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Attach to contract.
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Attach to recurring orders.
Spec sheet is not internal-only.
It must be supplier-aligned.
Step 13: Distribute to All Sites
If you operate multiple facilities:
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Send master spec to all sites.
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Train purchasing teams.
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Train receiving teams.
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Standardize inspection checklist.
Centralized spec only works if enforced locally.
Step 14: Review Quarterly
Every 90 days:
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Review defect rates.
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Review supplier compliance.
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Confirm photos match spec.
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Confirm no silent substitution.
Spec sheet is a living document.
But changes must be deliberate.
What a Strong Used Bulk Bag Spec Sheet Includes
A strong approved spec sheet contains:
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Exact dimensions
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SWL requirement
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Safety factor requirement
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Construction type
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Loop type and height
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Top configuration
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Bottom configuration
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Liner type and thickness (if required)
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Grade definition
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Acceptable prior contents
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Storage requirement
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Bale configuration
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Inspection procedure
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Defect tolerance
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Substitution policy
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Revision control
This document becomes your guardrail.
Why This Matters
Without a spec sheet:
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Suppliers substitute based on availability.
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Sites accept “close enough.”
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Performance varies.
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Freight fluctuates.
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Complaints increase.
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Procurement loses leverage.
With a spec sheet:
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Supplier alignment increases.
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Performance stabilizes.
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Drift reduces.
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Cost savings become sustainable.
Used bulk bags are not inherently unstable.
Programs without documentation are.
The Bottom Line
How do you build a used bulk bags approved spec sheet?
You:
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Start with operational needs
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Define structural requirements
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Lock configuration details
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Define liner policy clearly
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Write grade standards explicitly
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Restrict prior content streams
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Standardize inspection
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Prevent substitutions
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Control revisions
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Align suppliers formally
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Train internal teams
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Review quarterly
A used bulk bag spec sheet is not paperwork.
It’s control.
And control is what turns used bulk bags from a reactive purchase…
Into a disciplined, predictable, cost-efficient packaging program.