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Use steel strapping when you need maximum strength with minimal stretch and the load is so heavy, rigid, sharp, or hot that plastic strapping (PP/PET/composite) can’t be trusted to hold tension without getting cut, loosening, or failing.
In plain English: steel is for the loads that would laugh at “normal” straps.
Here are the real-world scenarios where steel is the right move, plus the “don’t use steel if…” rules that save money and prevent injuries.
Use steel strapping when…
1) The load is extremely heavy and rigid
Steel shines when the load is heavy and doesn’t compress much.
Examples:
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machinery and industrial components
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dense metal parts
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heavy rigid bundles that must stay clamped
Why steel: high tension + minimal stretch keeps rigid loads locked.
2) The load has sharp edges that can cut plastic straps
Sharp corners are where PET/PP can get sliced—especially under high tension.
Examples:
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metal products with hard edges
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banded bundles with abrasive contact points
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items that “saw” the strap during vibration
Why steel: better edge resistance, less cutting risk.
3) The load sees high heat where plastic can soften or creep
If your environment is hot enough to weaken plastic straps, steel wins.
Examples:
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hot manufacturing areas
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high-temperature storage/shipping conditions
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loads near heat processes
Why steel: temperature tolerance.
4) The consequences of failure are catastrophic
If a strap failure could cause injury, major product loss, or equipment damage, steel is often chosen for risk reduction.
Examples:
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high-value industrial shipments
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loads that could shift and crush product or people
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extreme transit abuse
Why steel: maximum strength and minimal stretch.
5) The load needs very high clamp force and can’t tolerate strap stretch
Steel provides a hard “clamp” effect.
Examples:
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rigid bundles where you want zero movement
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certain metal bundles, heavy lumber, or rigid industrial stacks
Why steel: it stays tight without elastic give.
Don’t use steel strapping when…
Steel is not automatically “better.” It’s “more extreme.”
Avoid steel when:
1) The load settles or compresses a lot
Cartons and bagged goods compress over time. Steel can lose tension and/or damage product.
Better choices:
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PET (polyester) strapping
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composite/corded strapping
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plus edge protectors
2) You’re strapping corrugated cartons without protection
Steel will crush corners and chew product unless you’re using strong edge protection.
Better choice:
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PET with edge protectors
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correct carton spec + pads
3) You want safer handling and lower injury risk
Steel can recoil, cut, and create sharp ends.
If safety is a priority (it should be), PET often wins unless steel is truly required.
4) You’re using steel just because “that’s what we always used”
A lot of operations can replace steel with PET and reduce:
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injuries
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product damage
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handling time
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and overall cost
Steel is for the loads that require it—not for tradition.
Quick decision checklist (fast)
Use steel if you answer “yes” to any of these:
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Is the load extremely heavy and rigid?
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Are there sharp edges that could cut plastic?
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Is the environment hot enough to degrade plastic straps?
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Is failure high-risk or catastrophic?
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Do you need maximum clamp force with minimal stretch?
If you answered “no” to most of these, PET is usually the smarter default for pallets.
The two biggest rules when using steel
Rule #1: Always use edge protection when there’s any chance of damage
Steel under tension + corners = crushed product without protectors.
Use:
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edge protectors / corner protectors
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strap guards
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pads when needed
Rule #2: Train for safety
Steel is not forgiving. Handling, tensioning, cutting, and releasing must be done safely.
Bottom line
Use steel strapping when loads are extremely heavy, rigid, sharp-edged, or exposed to high heat, and you need maximum strength with minimal stretch. For most palletized cartons and settling loads, PET strapping is usually the better choice—safer, easier, and often just as effective.