Compression Bag plus Cylinder Bag vs Compression Bag plus Stretch Film Wrap

When packaging compressed pure foam mattresses, which method is less likely to result in the package bursting during transit: a compression bag combined with a rigid sleeve/bag (barrel-style), or a compression bag combined with stretch wrap (industrial cling film)?

Conclusion: The compression bag + rigid sleeve/bag combination is less prone to bursting than the compression bag + stretch wrap combination, particularly in scenarios involving long-distance transport, high temperatures, or high-density foam mattresses.

I. Fundamental Differences Between the Two Structures

• Compression Bag + Stretch Wrap (Industrial Cling Film)

◦ Inner layer: Vacuum compression bag (PA+PE).

◦ Outer layer: LLDPE stretch wrap; relies on wrapping tension to hold the shape; lacks rigid support.

◦ Advantages: Low cost, lightweight, form-fitting, space-efficient.

◦ Weaknesses: Resistance to internal pressure relies entirely on wrapping tension; corners and valve areas are prone to bursting; prone to “bulging leading to bursting” during high-temperature expansion.

• Compression Bag + Rigid Sleeve/Bag (Cylindrical or Rectangular Rigid Plastic Bag)

◦ Inner layer: Same vacuum compression bag.

◦ Outer layer: Thickened PE/PP rigid sleeve (tubular); acts like a “rigid exoskeleton” to restrict radial expansion.

◦ Advantages:

1. Strong rigid constraint: The rigid sleeve tightly contains the inner bag, offering superior burst resistance.

2. Even force distribution: No uneven tension from wrapping; corners are less likely to tear.

3. Better temperature resistance: The rigid sleeve deforms far less than stretch wrap at high temperatures, minimizing bulging.

◦ Disadvantages: Slightly more expensive, thicker material, and larger overall volume (though still much smaller than an uncompressed mattress).

II. Comparison of Burst Risks (Pure Foam Mattresses)

• Compression Bag + Stretch Wrap:

◦ Short-distance (<7 days) or soft foam: Low risk.

◦ Long-distance, high temperatures, or high-density firm foam: Medium to high risk (bulging, corner splitting, valve air leaks).

• Compression Bag + Rigid Sleeve/Bag:

◦ Any condition: Extremely low risk.

◦ High-density firm foam + summer shipping containers: The safest choice. III. Practical Factory Applications

• Low-end domestic sales/short-distance transport: Compression bag + manual stretch film wrapping (lowest cost).

• Mid-range exports/standard products: Compression bag + machine stretch film wrapping (uniform and tight).

• High-end/long-distance sea freight/high-density foam: Compression bag + tubular bag (plus end sealing + outer carton/woven bag); preventing bag bursting is the top priority.

IV. How to Choose (Direct Recommendations)

• If you are dealing with pure foam mattresses, focusing on exports, and are concerned about bags bursting during sea freight:

✅ Preferred: Compression bag + tubular bag (most reliable).

✅ Alternative: Compression bag + machine stretch film (lower cost, but keep the compression ratio at ≤1/4 of the original thickness—do not compress to the absolute limit).

In short: Choose tubular bags to prevent bursting; choose stretch film to save money on short-distance transport.

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