Question I have to ask since I find everyone on here very valuable. We are a Food Packaging converter. We only slit down film. We have purchased a sheeting machine, which takes a roll of plastic film and makes it into sheets. Before we get any inquiries for samples or move forward with commissioning and selling, we are trying to figure out the best way to package the sheets. Right now we are thinking of stacks of 1,000 - 3,000 in thousand increments depending on gauge. We have a few carboard trays and boxes to put the stacks of sheets into. In order to keep our food contact compliance, are we able to put the sheets just in the cardboard box/tray, wrap that box and tray and unitize it or would we have to put in some sort of film down in the box, place the sheets in, wrap the film around it and secure, wrap the box/tray and unitize? This is a new realm that I do not have much experience in. I know in the industry cardboard is sometimes seen as 'dirty', but at the same time we get pizza delivered in a cardboard box. I just want to make sure we navigate this properly if we have an inquiry that wants to use the sheets for food contact. I would imagine there may be some cardboard deemed as ok for food contact maybe? Luckily film, does not support an environment for pathogen growth, so I am just trying to figure out the risk and what the best practice would be for packaging the sheets. Thank you in advance.
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