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If you’re asking about slip sheet pull tab options, you’re asking the right question — because the pull tab (also called the lip) is the whole game.
You can have the perfect slip sheet material… and if the tab is wrong:
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the push-pull can’t clamp it right
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the tab tears
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the load shifts
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operators get frustrated
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and the entire “let’s save money with slip sheets” project gets thrown in the trash
So let’s break down the pull tab options, what each one is good for, and how to pick the right one for your workflow.
What Is a Slip Sheet Pull Tab?
A slip sheet pull tab (lip) is the extended flap on the slip sheet that the push-pull attachment grabs to pull the unit load onto the forklift platen.
No tab = no grab point.
Weak tab = torn tab.
Wrong tab direction = “who designed this?” moment at the dock.
A good pull tab is:
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the right size for your attachment
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the right direction for your workflow
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strong enough to handle your load weight
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reinforced if needed
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and consistent so operators don’t have to “think” every pull
The Main Slip Sheet Pull Tab Options
1) Single Pull Tab (Single Lip)
What it is: One tab on one side of the slip sheet.
Best for:
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workflows where loads are always pulled in the same direction
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simple dock-to-dock operations
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consistent handling lanes
Pros:
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cheapest and simplest
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less material than multi-tab designs
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easy for operators (always the same orientation)
Cons:
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if the load needs to be pulled from different directions, you’re stuck
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misorientation causes delays (someone rotates the load or reworks it)
This is the most common option when operations are consistent.
2) Double Pull Tabs (Opposite Sides)
What it is: Tabs on two opposite sides.
Best for:
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operations where you might pull from either direction
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warehouses with multiple lanes or mixed receiving conditions
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setups where orientation isn’t always predictable
Pros:
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more flexibility
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reduces reorientation time
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helps when receivers vary
Cons:
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slightly more material/cost
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still not as flexible as 4-way tabs
If you want flexibility without going full “any direction,” double tabs are a strong middle ground.
3) Two Adjacent Tabs (L-Shape / Corner Flex)
What it is: Tabs on two adjacent sides.
Best for:
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workflows where the load may be pulled from either the long side or short side depending on staging
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mixed storage layouts
Pros:
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flexible for certain warehouse layouts
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reduces “we need to turn it” issues
Cons:
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not universal
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can create confusion if operators aren’t trained
This option is great when you know your layout forces two possible pull directions, but not all four.
4) Four-Way Pull Tabs (Tabs on All Sides)
What it is: A tab on each side.
Best for:
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maximum flexibility
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mixed distribution environments
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unpredictable receiving conditions
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operations where loads might be accessed from any direction
Pros:
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most flexible
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reduces rework and reorientation
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ideal for distribution networks with many receiving styles
Cons:
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more material (cost)
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more tabs = more potential snag points if not handled neatly
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not always needed if your workflow is consistent
If you ship to lots of different facilities and don’t control orientation, 4-way tabs can prevent headaches.
Tab Width and Length (The Detail That Saves You)
Tab design is not just “how many tabs.”
It’s also:
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tab width
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tab length
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tab reinforcement
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tab orientation relative to the load
The tab must match your push-pull attachment’s clamp area.
If it’s too small:
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clamp slips
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tab tears
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pull fails
If it’s too long or poorly placed:
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tabs crumple
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snag
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or get damaged in handling
This is why we ask about your push-pull equipment (model if possible) and your load weight.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
Reinforced Pull Tabs (When You Need Them)
If you’re pulling heavy loads, rough handling, or high-speed ops, a reinforced tab can be a lifesaver.
Reinforcement options depend on the slip sheet material (paper vs plastic) and the application.
Reinforced tabs are often worth it when:
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loads are heavy
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pulls are frequent
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receivers are rougher on handling
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tab tearing has happened before
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operators don’t baby the process (most don’t)
If your team is already saying “tabs keep tearing,” reinforcement isn’t optional — it’s the fix.
Paper vs Plastic Pull Tabs (How Material Changes the Tab Choice)
Paperboard slip sheets
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good for dry environments
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great for one-way shipments
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tab durability depends heavily on thickness and reinforcement
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moisture is the enemy
Plastic slip sheets
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better for wet/humid/cold environments
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better for reuse programs
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generally higher durability, including tab strength
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costs more upfront but can pay off over reuse cycles
If you need high durability tabs and you plan to reuse sheets, plastic often wins.
Common Pull Tab Problems (And What Causes Them)
Problem: Tab tears during pull
Causes:
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wrong tab size for clamp
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too thin material
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no reinforcement
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load too heavy
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too much friction during pull
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bad platen face condition
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operator error (jerking the pull)
Problem: Clamp slips
Causes:
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tab too narrow
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clamp pressure incorrect
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tab material too smooth (less common)
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wrong clamp alignment
Problem: Tabs get crushed or snagged in staging
Causes:
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tabs too long
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poor pallet staging discipline
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operators driving over tabs
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load not positioned correctly
When we quote pull tab options, we’re trying to eliminate these problems before they start.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
How to Choose the Right Pull Tab Option (Fast Buyer Logic)
Here’s the simplest way to pick:
If you always pull from one direction:
âś… Single tab
If you sometimes pull from either end:
âś… Double tabs (opposite sides)
If your layout forces two adjacent pull directions:
âś… Two adjacent tabs
If your receiving conditions are unpredictable:
âś… Four-way tabs
Then refine based on:
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load weight
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material type (paper vs plastic)
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reuse vs one-way
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environment (moisture exposure)
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attachment clamp requirements
What We Need to Quote Slip Sheet Pull Tab Options Fast
To quote the right slip sheet and pull tab configuration, send:
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Load footprint (L x W)
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Load weight
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Product type (cases, bags, cartons, etc.)
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Push-pull attachment model (if known)
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Preferred pull direction (always same? mixed?)
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One-way or reuse?
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Environment (dry, humid, cold chain, outdoor staging)
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Quantity (MOQ 5,000)
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Delivery zip code + timeline
If you don’t know the attachment model, a photo of the forklift attachment and the slip sheet handling area is usually enough to spec tab sizing correctly.
Why CPP for Slip Sheets and Pull Tab Programs
Because you’re not buying tabs.
You’re buying a workflow that saves money — and tabs are the failure point if they’re not spec’d right.
CPP helps you:
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choose the correct tab configuration
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match tab sizing to your attachment
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prevent tearing and clamp slip
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and supply slip sheets at volume reliably
Bottom Line
Slip sheet pull tab options aren’t cosmetic — they determine whether push-pull handling works smoothly or fails on day one.
Tell us your load footprint, load weight, and whether you pull from one direction or multiple, and we’ll spec the right pull tab configuration fast.