Understanding and Identifying Soft Plastics - Thermogard (2024)

Soft Plastics have grown in popularity and are now an everyday part of life for consumers and businesses. Due to their widespread use, it is crucial that there is understanding around what they are, where they are used and how to dispose of these materials correctly to ensure that these materials are used in a sustainable way and their impact on the environment is kept to a minimum.

What are Soft Plastics?

Soft Plastics is a broad term used for a common packaging material, and can consist entirely of one type of plastic, or multiple types, layered alongside other materials like aluminium and cardboard. Soft plastics usually consist of one of three types of plastics – Low-density Polyethene (LDPE), High-density Polyethene (HDPE) or Polypropylene (PP). This film is ‘soft’ in structure, and an easy way to identify a soft plastic product is a product that scrunches up and doesn’t bounce back.

Common items that include soft plastic films are bread bags, grocery bags, bubble wrap and various plastic wrappers of food items. Thermogard and other cool-chain packaging companies utilise soft plastics in their ice packs, carton insulation options.

Understanding and Identifying Soft Plastics - Thermogard (1)Understanding and Identifying Soft Plastics - Thermogard (2)Understanding and Identifying Soft Plastics - Thermogard (3)

Understanding Soft Plastic Films

The argument for the use of these plastics is evident, due to their continued use across multiple industries, however if not identified and recycled properly, they can do more harm than good. Soft plastics have been looked down on by many and the name has had a lot of ‘bad press’, however, as local governments continue to invest in recycling technology, certain plastics are now able to be upcycled into other useful products.

Soft plastics are incredibly popular as a packaging material and have been for a long time, and for good reason. Positive aspects of soft plastic use include the fact that they can are reutilised when recycled correctly and made into plastic pallets, furniture, and other assorted items, and are therefore not adding to landfill. Additionally, as we recycle this waste material instead of disposing, like for materials like glass, so therefore soft plastics require less energy to be recycled. As a packaging material, it is lightweight, yet durable and extremely cost effective to manufacture and transport.

However, as with any plastics, there is a downside, apparent when irresponsibly used or disposed of. Soft plastics can be unsustainable and harmful to the environment if they are not recycled correctly, and it is reported than over 90% of existing plastic in the world has never been recycled. When manufactured, carbon dioxide is produced in large amounts and adds to already high greenhouse gas levels. They can cause costly damages to normal plastic recycling factories, can add to landfill, and due to their lightweight components, can be blown out of landfills and pollute the environment. When breaking down in the environment, they can further inflict damage on the environment as these small pieces enter waterways, our soil and can be ingested by animals.

Can I recycle Soft Plastics?

Soft plastics can be recycled, although in some countries this may be considered specialist recycling. Soft plastics cannot be recycled in your kerbside bins and will need to go to a soft plastics recycling depot, or more commonly, taken to participating supermarkets who house dedicated soft plastic recycling bins.

It is crucial to separate soft plastics from your normal recycling or rubbish as when these films are recycled through the proper methods, they are are reused and blended with other components to create new products, saving raw materials and energy, instead of adding to landfill.

To recycle soft plastics, you must ensure the plastic film is clean and free from any food remnants, as this is standard procedure with any plastic packaging. Once clean and dry, soft plastics can be gathered and dropped off at a soft plastics recycling bin, commonly found in supermarkets across New Zealand*. Find your nearest drop-off here**;

New Zealand Locations

*Unfortunately, Soft Plastics recycling is no longer available in Australia.

**Please note that our US Gel Ice Packs Soft Plastics Film is a number 7 plastic, and should be recycled at an appropriate depot near you.

To conclude, soft plastics are a large and useful part of life for both businesses and consumers, and do not appear to be disappearing any time soon. Therefore, it is important to be able to identify the soft plastics you are using, and ensure they are being recycled correctly, so collectively we can minimise their potential environmental and dispose of these materials responsibly while they still exist.

Thermogard continues to innovate and deliver quality cold-chain packaging solutions, if you are interested in finding out more about different solutions available or you have questions about soft plastics, get in touch now.

Understanding and Identifying Soft Plastics - Thermogard (2024)

FAQs

How do I know what soft plastic to use? ›

A size to suit the fish you're targeting

Obviously there are exceptions, but just as when you're fishing baits, bigger snapper are more likely to be attracted to bulkier soft-plastic lures than smaller ones (and vice versa, with greater numbers of smaller snapper being caught on 3- to 4-inch soft-plastics).

What pound test for soft plastics? ›

Line: Spool up with 15- to 50-pound test braid or 8- to 15-pound test fluorocarbon, depending on cover thickness. Both will help you feel the light bites that weightless soft plastics draw.

What weight to use for soft plastics? ›

The weight rating of your rod will depend on the depth and style of fishing that you are doing, however a good starting point is a 2-4kg rod in the shallows. More experienced anglers might even go down to 1-3kg in the shallows for fishing finesse soft plastics.

What color soft plastics to use for bass? ›

If you're having trouble getting bites, try using a watermelon-colored soft plastic or other translucent colors like plum or pumpkin with some sort of shiny glitter in it. These little flakes reflect light very well, drawing more attention to your bait and giving the bass a little extra “something” to hone in on.

Do I use a sinker with soft plastics? ›

Do you use a sinker with soft plastics? Absolutely, a sinker helps to get your lure down to the fish, and also gives it extra action as it falls. Swivels are also a good idea, as they help to prevent line twists.

What is the best line for soft plastics? ›

Braided Fishing Line

Although you can cast your topwater lures farther with monofilament, throwing surface lures such as buzz baits and plastic frogs on braided line is the best option because it floats well and has better hook-setting power since it has low stretch.

How do you identify plastic by simple test? ›

Heat an electronic soldering iron to red hot and press against the unknown sample. If the plastic material softens, and the rod penetrates the sample is thermoplastic. If the plastic material does not soften and the rod does not penetrate, the sample is thermoset plastic.

What color braid line is best? ›

Bright yellows, greens, pinks, and whites round out the most common high-visibility varieties, while hues of greens and grays tend to blend best with the water and cover.

What is the best hook for soft plastics? ›

Tube Jig Heads: Soft plastic tubes generally range in sizes from 2.5-3.5 inches. Most anglers use tube-style jigs with either 3/0-4/0 hook sizes to accommodate the smaller baits. The standard worm style hook works well for this lure because of their longer shanks.

Can you fish soft plastics at night? ›

It's no secret that you can catch fish on plastics at night; a lot of keen anglers have been doing it for years. During the winter months the graveyard hours are my favourite time to chase fish on plastics, with my best fish having been taken while the water is black and when there is little to no sunlight.

Do you need a jighead for soft plastics? ›

If you want to use soft plastic lure, you need couple of different weight jig head. If condition are change we must choose right weight jig head. Generally, I recommend one soft plastic lure need three different weight jig head.

What rod action is best for soft plastics? ›

Action is where on the rod does the bending takes place. In general, fast action rod tips are best for weedless soft plastic lures.

What color soft plastic is best for dirty water? ›

Solid colors are the way to go for dirty water situations, and black or black and blue are two proven other colors that always produce and show up well in stained and muddy water. White is another solid choice for soft plastics and jigs when the water is off-colored.

How can you tell soft plastic? ›

Scrunch test – The easy way to tell if plastic is soft or hard is the scrunch test. If it scrunches into a ball it's soft, if it holds it's shape it's hard.

When to use pink soft plastics? ›

If you are fishing shallow grass flats or around sandy areas, this is an excellent lure choice. When the water clarity is somewhat cloudy but not completely murky or brown in color, the pink lure color shines.

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