Molded pulp benefits beer, motorcycle parts shipments

Harley-Davidson and Merchant Direct discussed how they ride the advantages of molded pulp at IMPEPA’s late-September seminar.

Harley-Davidson uses molded pulp to help protect shipments of motorcycle parts and accessories, as shown (above) by packaging en
Harley-Davidson uses molded pulp to help protect shipments of motorcycle parts and accessories, as shown (above) by packaging en

It’s not every day that a speaker at a technical conference begins his presentation by offering cold beer and bottle openers. Yet that’s precisely what John Billman did at the 5th International Molded Pulp Packaging Seminar. Held in Milwaukee in late September, the seminar was presented by the Intl. Molded Pulp Environmental Packaging Assn. (Mequon, WI).

Billman is the director of production with Merchant Direct, a Lake Bluff, IL-based mail-order company that ships microbrews as part of its Beer Across America “beer-of-the-month” club. Members receive a 12-pack (six each of two beers) of specialty beers each month that contain either longnecks or short, stubby bottles.

Billman provided a six-year historical perspective of the inner packing used by Merchant Direct to prevent bottle breakage during shipping. “Initially we used corrugated inserts, but they were difficult to set up and labor-intensive,” he said. “It could take a guy 10 or 15 seconds to wrestle open the insert and position it inside a shipping case.

“Next,” Billman continued, “we changed to expanded polystyrene trays, which were inexpensive and stopped shipping damages. But they didn’t nest. They took us a long time to unload and move around in our warehouse. Plus, we were receiving customer complaints about our lack of environmental concern.”

After conducting shipping and drop tests, Merchant Direct switched to molded pulp from EnviroPak (St. Louis, MO). “We’re now entering our third year using molded pulp trays, which are shipped to us in pallet loads and are easy for us to place in cases,” noted Billman.

“EnviroPak designed them so that one bottom and one top tray could be used for both longneck and stubby bottle shapes,” he said. The molded pulp piece that fits into the bottom of the case is designed to fit the larger diameter of the squat bottle. “The longneck has a slightly smaller diameter, so there’s a little area in the bottom where they can move around in, but nothing that would cause harm,” Billman related.

Perhaps most interesting is the tray used on top of the bottles. “That was the really tricky part for them,” he said of the tray supplier. “They created a top piece that we can just drop onto the bottles, and it literally slides down to cover the necks of the short bottles.”

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