Gaylord Liner Shipping & Storage Tips

Table of Contents

Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ): 3,000 liners

Shipping and storing Gaylord liners isn’t complicated — but doing it wrong creates all the problems you’ll see later on the warehouse floor.

Wrinkles.

Weak spots.

Tears during filling.

Static issues.

Moisture problems.

Operator frustration.

All of this starts before the liner even touches the Gaylord box.

Good storage and good shipping practices make the liner stronger, cleaner, safer, and easier to use when it counts.

If you want your liners to work the way they’re designed, you need to store them like the valuable packaging assets they actually are.

Call or Text us at 832.400.1394


Why Proper Storage Matters for Gaylord Liners

A liner is only as strong as the environment it’s kept in.

Heat changes film flexibility.

Cold makes liners stiff.

Humidity affects barrier films and product behavior.

Dust contamination shows up inside your product later.

Improper stacking creases the film permanently.

Everything you do before using a liner changes what happens during filling.


Store Gaylord Liners in a Controlled Environment

Liners should never sit in random warehouse corners.

They should be stored:

  • Indoors
  • Off the ground
  • Away from moisture
  • Away from direct sunlight
  • Away from temperature swings

Film materials expand and contract with temperature.

A stable environment prevents premature aging and lost performance.


Keep Liners Away From Sharp Objects

One tiny puncture becomes a major leak during filling.

Store liners away from:

  • Pallet edges
  • Metal racks
  • Straps
  • Forklift forks
  • Box staples
  • Broken pallets

Liners are protective — but only when they are protected first.


Use Pallet Racking or Shelving Instead of Floor Stacking

Floor stacking exposes liners to:

  • Moisture wicking from concrete
  • Impact damage
  • Collapse from over-stacking
  • Pallet scuffing
  • Dirt and debris

Shelving keeps liners:

  • Clean
  • Dry
  • Undamaged
  • Easy to inventory
  • Easy to access

If you want liner performance to stay consistent, elevate the storage.


Protect Liners From Dust and Airborne Contamination

Liners absorb dust easily.

Dust inside a liner becomes:

  • Contamination
  • Product discoloration
  • Texture change
  • Quality issues

Use dust covers.

Keep liners sealed until use.

Avoid storing them near dusty operations like cutting, grinding, or forklift traffic.


Avoid Humidity and Moisture Exposure

Humidity is one of the biggest threats to liner performance.

It causes:

  • Film softening
  • Condensation risk
  • Moisture absorption (for barrier liners)
  • Clumping of product during filling
  • Stiffness or tackiness

Store liners in low-humidity environments whenever possible.


Rotate Inventory to Keep Film Fresh

Liners don’t “expire,” but they do degrade slowly over time.

Use FIFO rotation:

  • First in
  • First out

This prevents liners from aging while newer liners sit untouched.


Use Protective Packaging During Shipping

Shipping can damage liner pallets if they’re not protected correctly.

Use:

  • Corner protectors
  • Stretch wrap
  • Top covers
  • Shrink hoods (when possible)
  • Proper pallet labeling

Well-wrapped pallets prevent rubbing, shifting, and tearing during transit.


Avoid Overheating Liners in Trailers or Warehouses

Heat changes liner behavior dramatically.

Hot film becomes:

  • Soft
  • Sticky
  • More prone to tearing
  • Harder to open
  • Less consistent in thickness

Avoid storing liners in:

  • Hot trailers
  • Near dock doors
  • Sun-exposed areas
  • Under skylights

Heat is silent — but destructive.


Avoid Freezing Temperatures

Cold creates the opposite problem.

Cold liners become:

  • Brittle
  • Stiff
  • Hard to open
  • Prone to cracking during stretching
  • Difficult for operators to unfold

If your climate is cold, let liners warm to room temperature before opening.


Keep Liners Stored in Their Original Packaging Until Use

The factory packaging is designed to protect:

  • Sterility
  • Alignment
  • Shape
  • Fold integrity
  • Surface quality

Opening liners too early increases contamination and wear.


Never Store Liners Near Chemicals or Strong Odors

Liners absorb odors easily.

Those odors transfer into your product.

Keep liners away from:

  • Solvents
  • Oils
  • Cleaning agents
  • Industrial chemicals
  • Food-processing aromas

Odor transfer is real — and often irreversible.


Train Operators on How to Remove Liners Without Damage

Most liner damage happens during unboxing.

Teach operators to avoid:

  • Pulling liners by a corner
  • Dragging liners on the floor
  • Snagging liners on pallet edges
  • Using knives too aggressively
  • Twisting or folding liners excessively

Gentle handling = longer-lasting liners + better filling performance.


Provide a Clean Opening Area for Liners

Set up a small zone dedicated to opening liners.

This prevents contamination from:

  • Floor dust
  • Wood chips
  • Plastic debris
  • Forklift tire particles

A clean liner opening area means a clean internal box environment.

Call or Text us at 832.400.1394


Protect Liners During Internal Transport

If a liner needs to be moved between departments, use:

  • Covered carts
  • Clean bins
  • Designated transfer bags

Never let liners bounce around loose — that’s how they pick up tears, dust, and creases.


Keep Liners Away From UV Light

UV exposure weakens poly film.

Sunlight breaks down:

  • Durability
  • Flex strength
  • Load capacity
  • Barrier properties

If your warehouse uses natural skylights, avoid storing liners under direct beams.


Check Liners for Damage Before Use

Before placing a liner inside a Gaylord, inspect:

  • Corners
  • Sidewalls
  • Outer folds
  • Edges
  • Seams

Catch small defects early.
Fixing them after filling is impossible.


Use Correct Pallet Orientation During Shipping

Liner pallets should always travel:

  • Upright
  • Wrapped
  • Secured

Do not:

  • Tip pallets
  • Store them on sides
  • Stack them at extreme angles

Film memory (shape retention) matters — crushed pallets mean crushed performance.


Final Thoughts: Your Liners Last Longer When Your Storage Practices Are Smarter

Liners protect your product.

But first, you must protect the liners.

Store them correctly and you get:

  • Cleaner product
  • Faster filling
  • Stronger film
  • Less waste
  • Fewer tears
  • Better discharge flow
  • Safer handling
  • Longer box life

Treat your liners like critical equipment — because they are.

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