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Polyethylene pellets are small.
Uniform.
Smooth.
Free-flowing.
And deceptively easy to underestimate.
Because while they donβt weigh as much as sand or cementβ¦ they introduce a completely different set of challenges:
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Static buildup
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Pellet sifting through seams
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Spillage during discharge
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Dust fines escape
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Slipping hazards on floors
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Cleanliness expectations from customers
If you choose the wrong bulk bag for polyethylene (PE) pellets, the problems wonβt show up immediately.
Theyβll show up as:
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Small leaks at seams
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Minor product loss
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Messy discharge stations
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Increased cleanup labor
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Customer complaints about contamination
The goal is not just to βhold pellets.β
The goal is to move pellets cleanly, safely, and efficiently.
So letβs break down exactly what new bulk bag configuration works best for polyethylene pellets β and why.
Call Or Text Now to Get a Quote: 832-400-1394Step 1: Understand Polyethylene Pellet Characteristics
Before choosing a bag, understand the material.
Polyethylene pellets typically have:
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Bulk density: 35β45 lbs per cubic foot
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Low moisture sensitivity
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Smooth, round shape
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Free-flowing behavior
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Static generation potential
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Small particle size (sifting risk)
Compared to polypropylene pellets, PE pellets behave similarly in bulk density β but static and sifting are still real concerns.
This means your bag must focus on:
Containment.
Structural margin.
Controlled discharge.
Step 2: Choose the Correct Bag Size
Letβs start with volume math.
A common bulk bag size for pellets is:
35β x 35β x 50β
Convert to cubic feet:
35β Γ· 12 = 2.92 ft
50β Γ· 12 = 4.17 ft
2.92 Γ 2.92 Γ 4.17 β 35.5 cubic feet
At 40 lbs per cubic foot:
35.5 Γ 40 = 1,420 lbs
Thatβs a comfortable fill weight.
If you want to approach 1,800β2,000 lbs per bag, youβll likely use:
36β x 36β x 60β
The right size depends on:
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Desired fill weight
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Freight efficiency goals
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Handling equipment capacity
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Customer requirements
Do not size the bag without running the density math.
Step 3: Recommended SWL for PE Pellets
Most polyethylene pellet programs fall in these ranges:
1,400β1,600 lbs per bag
or
1,800β2,000 lbs per bag
Recommended SWL:
-
2,000 lb SWL for 1,400β1,600 lb fills
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2,500 lb SWL for 1,800β2,000 lb fills
Why not use 2,000 lb SWL for 2,000 lb fills?
Because you should operate at 80β90% of SWL.
Dynamic forklift motion adds stress beyond static weight.
A little margin prevents long-term seam fatigue.
Step 4: Construction Type β What Works Best
Polyethylene pellets are small and free-flowing.
That means seam integrity matters.
Two strong construction options:
U-Panel Construction
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Strong vertical seams
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Stable shape
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Reliable stacking
Circular Construction
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Fewer side seams
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Reduced sifting potential
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Smooth body wall
Both work well.
For maximum containment and structural stability, U-panel is widely used and reliable.
If minimizing vertical seams is a priority, circular construction can help reduce sifting risk.
Step 5: Fabric β Coated vs Uncoated
This is critical.
Pellets can migrate through stitch holes.
If you use uncoated fabric:
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Minor pellet sifting can occur
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Fine dust may escape
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Cleanliness suffers
Recommended for polyethylene pellets:
Coated polypropylene fabric bulk bag
Benefits:
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Reduced sifting
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Improved moisture resistance
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Cleaner containment
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Better product presentation
Uncoated fabric may work β but coated fabric dramatically improves containment.
Step 6: Top Configuration β Best Option
Best choice:
Fill Spout Top
Why?
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Controlled filling
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Reduced pellet splash
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Cleaner environment
-
Compatible with automated filling systems
Recommended spout diameter:
14ββ18β depending on fill system
Duffle tops are acceptable, but spout tops provide better process control.
Step 7: Bottom Configuration β Critical for Clean Discharge
The best bottom option:
Discharge Spout
Why?
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Controlled flow
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Minimal pellet spillage
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Cleaner floor
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Compatible with automated discharge stations
Flat-bottom cut-and-dump increases spill risk.
Discharge spouts reduce mess and improve operator safety.
Step 8: Liner β Do You Need One?
Polyethylene pellets are not highly moisture-sensitive.
But liners can improve:
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Containment
-
Cleanliness
-
Static management
-
Food-grade compliance
Most common liner choice:
2β4 mil polyethylene liner
However, many pellet operations use coated bags without liners successfully.
Use a liner if:
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Customer requires extra containment
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Static risk is high
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Regulatory compliance demands it
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Pellet fines are excessive
Avoid over-specifying liners unless necessary.
Step 9: Static Electricity Considerations
Polyethylene pellets can generate static during:
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Pneumatic loading
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High-speed discharge
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Dry climate handling
If your environment includes:
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Combustible dust
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Flammable vapors
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Static-sensitive equipment
You may need:
Type C (groundable) bulk bags
or
Type D (static dissipative) bulk bags
Most standard pellet operations do not require this β but evaluate your environment.
Never ignore static risk in hazardous facilities.
Step 10: Loop Type Recommendation
Best loop style:
Cross Corner Loops
Why?
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Easy forklift engagement
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Stable lifting
-
Compatible with automated loop spreaders
Loop height:
10ββ12β standard
Ensure reinforced stitching.
Lifting is where most stress occurs.
Step 11: Stacking Considerations
If stacking:
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Use minimum 2,500 lb SWL for 2-high stacking
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Confirm bag is rated for stacking
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Ensure even fill
PE pellets stack well because they settle uniformly.
But bottom bag still absorbs compressive stress.
Choose strength accordingly.
Step 12: Freight Efficiency
Freight matters more than you think.
A slightly larger bag may reduce:
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Bag count per truck
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Handling labor
-
Pallet count
But heavier bags require:
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Stronger SWL
-
Stronger pallets
-
Careful forklift handling
Balance freight optimization with structural margin.
Step 13: Food-Grade Considerations
If polyethylene pellets are used in:
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Food packaging manufacturing
-
Medical packaging
-
Sensitive applications
Ensure:
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Virgin fabric
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Clean production environment
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Food-grade certification
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Traceability documentation
Do not assume all new bags are automatically food-grade compliant.
Ask for documentation.
Step 14: Common Mistakes to Avoid
Do not:
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Use uncoated bags without testing for sifting
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Fill to 100% SWL
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Ignore static in dry environments
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Skip discharge spout in automated systems
-
Over-spec expensive barrier liners unnecessarily
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Assume pellet size prevents seam migration
Pellets are small enough to find weak points.
Design accordingly.
Ideal Configuration Summary
For most polyethylene pellet applications, the best new bulk bag configuration is:
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Size: 35β x 35β x 50β or 36β x 36β x 60β
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SWL: 2,000β2,500 lbs
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Safety Factor: 5:1 minimum
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Construction: U-panel or circular
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Fabric: Coated polypropylene
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Top: Fill spout
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Bottom: Discharge spout
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Liner: Optional 2β4 mil PE (based on need)
-
Loop Type: Cross-corner
This setup delivers:
Containment
Process control
Freight efficiency
Structural margin
Operational cleanliness
The Bottom Line
Polyethylene pellets may seem simple.
But the wrong bulk bag creates:
Small leaks
Static issues
Spillage
Cleanup labor
Customer complaints
The best new bulk bags for polyethylene pellets are:
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Structurally sound
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Coated for containment
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Designed for controlled fill and discharge
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Sized based on density math
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Rated with proper SWL margin
When configured correctly, pellet handling becomes:
Clean.
Predictable.
Efficient.
Safe.
And predictable packaging is what keeps operations running smoothly β without waste, mess, or surprise failures.