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Industrial Plastic Container Cord Strapping Solutions
Plastic drums, IBCs, and intermediate bulk containers create a specific securing problem that most standard strapping systems are not built to solve. Their curved surfaces concentrate strap load on small contact areas, their polymer walls flex under tension, and their chemical contents demand materials that resist contamination and degradation. PET, PP, and steel all fall short here: PET lacks system

Container Lashing Strip: Secure Cargo for Safe Shipping
Introduction Cargo damage during sea freight isn’t random—it follows a pattern. Loads shift when lashing strips are under-tensioned, incorrectly anchored, or simply mismatched to the weight and geometry of what’s inside the container. The IMO estimates that improper cargo securing contributes to thousands of container incidents annually, many of which result in total cargo loss, vessel damage, or safety threats

Industrial PET Strapping: High-Tensile Polyester Solutions
Introduction Industrial packaging operations lose product, time, and credibility when strapping materials fail under load—splitting under tension, rusting during maritime transit, or snapping back and injuring workers during removal. High-tensile PET strapping eliminates these failure modes by combining breaking strengths from 400 kg to over 1,500 kg with shock absorption, split resistance, and zero corrosion risk across the same applications

Industrial Cord Strap: High-Strength Polyester Strapping
Introduction Most packaging operations switch to industrial cord strap after a failure, not before one. A steel strap rusts through during a 45-day ocean transit. A PP strap goes slack halfway through a cross-country truck haul. A flat PET strap snaps at the crimp on a load that shifts during braking. Industrial polyester cord strap solves each of these failure

Heavy Duty Lashing Strap: Industrial Cargo Tie Down Guide
Cargo damage in transit rarely happens because the load was too heavy. It happens because the restraint system was under-specified, incorrectly applied, or built around the wrong strap type for the job. A 10-tonne machine on a flat rack, a steel coil inside a container, or a turbine component on a road trailer can all move under braking, swell, or

High-Quality Wire Buckles for Strapping and Packaging Needs
Introduction Strapping failures rarely start with the strap itself. They start at the buckle—the one component most procurement teams treat as a commodity, ordering whatever’s cheapest without checking wire gauge, coating quality, or size compatibility. A buckle that slips under vibration, corrodes in a humid warehouse, or deforms under real load doesn’t just fail the strap—it fails the entire securing