Amazon has 25-Count 30-Gallon Glad ForceFlex Drawstring Trash Bags on sale for $6.83 when you clip the $2.45 Off coupon found on the product page and checkout with Subscribe and Save. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $25+ orders.
Thanks to Community Member Refundroid for sharing this deal.
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Editor's Notes & Price Research
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Rated 4.7 out of 5 stars from over 6,800 reviews.
At the time of this posting, Our research indicates that this is $3.16 lower (31.6% savings) than the next best available prices starting from $9.99. -SaltyOne
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I don't think you understand how CCC works. CCC shows the lowest price for the specific product listing, not what other price points exist for other products/bundles. With your logic, most deals won't be deals just because larger discounts exist for bulk purchase. This is the lowest price it's ever been for this single product listing (if you have 5 or more S&S products to trigger 15% off).
My company makes these
These are not for heavy garbage. They're OK for light stuff, or maybe to haul dry clothes back from the laundromat, but they're thin and the flex grid creates weak points that are more prone to tearing and spilling trash everywhere
The fact that they're stretchy means that if there's anything heavy in them, they'll stretch to the point it's difficult for an average- height person (say, 5'10" or shorter) to lift the bag enough to clear the ground without lifting from the bottom
If they're heavy you can't lift by the drawstring anyway, because it tears through the thin channel and rips open the top of the bag, making it impossible to re-tie
We use much nicer bags in our own facility.
This is not a bag I would willingly pay money for
And yes, the Members Mark bags of the same style are thicker
Order 3, get $4.00 slow shipping credit.
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As stated so in the title. According to CCC, this is close to the lowest price ever ($6.79) in 2015. Or, if you have 5 or more S&S item, you get the lowest price ever actually. So, not sure what your point is.
As stated so in the title. According to CCC, this is close to the lowest price ever ($6.79) in 2015. Or, if you have 5 or more S&S item, you get the lowest price ever actually. So, not sure what your point is.
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12-02-2022
at
01:29 PM#6
Quote
from slickster412
:
It's definitely not the lowest price.
I got 3 of these for $9 the last time.
I don't think you understand how CCC works. CCC shows the lowest price for the specific product listing, not what other price points exist for other products/bundles. With your logic, most deals won't be deals just because larger discounts exist for bulk purchase. This is the lowest price it's ever been for this single product listing (if you have 5 or more S&S products to trigger 15% off).
I don't think you understand how CCC works. CCC shows the lowest price for the specific product listing, not what other price points exist for other products/bundles. With your logic, most deals won't be deals just because larger discounts exist for bulk purchase. This is the lowest price it's ever been for this single product listing (if you have 5 or more S&S products to trigger 15% off).
If my math is correct, this is about the same price per bag (~$0.27) as the regular price 33 gal 90 bag box I bought at BJs ($23.99). That price gets reduced with a $3 coupon which brings the per bag price down to $0.23.
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12-03-2022
at
02:58 AM#11
Sams Club has their Member's Mark Power Flex, which are actually thicker than these and have over 5300 five star reviews, for $17.48 in 90 count. That works out to .19 cents per bag. They are a bit bigger at 33 gallons, so might not work for everyone.
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12-03-2022
at
03:53 AM#12
My company makes these
These are not for heavy garbage. They're OK for light stuff, or maybe to haul dry clothes back from the laundromat, but they're thin and the flex grid creates weak points that are more prone to tearing and spilling trash everywhere
The fact that they're stretchy means that if there's anything heavy in them, they'll stretch to the point it's difficult for an average- height person (say, 5'10" or shorter) to lift the bag enough to clear the ground without lifting from the bottom
If they're heavy you can't lift by the drawstring anyway, because it tears through the thin channel and rips open the top of the bag, making it impossible to re-tie
We use much nicer bags in our own facility.
This is not a bag I would willingly pay money for
And yes, the Members Mark bags of the same style are thicker
Sams Club has their Member's Mark Power Flex, which are actually thicker than these and have over 5300 five star reviews, for $17.48 in 90 count. That works out to .19 cents per bag. They are a bit bigger at 33 gallons, so might not work for everyone.
These are not for heavy garbage. They're OK for light stuff, or maybe to haul dry clothes back from the laundromat, but they're thin and the flex grid creates weak points that are more prone to tearing and spilling trash everywhere
The fact that they're stretchy means that if there's anything heavy in them, they'll stretch to the point it's difficult for an average- height person (say, 5'10" or shorter) to lift the bag enough to clear the ground without lifting from the bottom
If they're heavy you can't lift by the drawstring anyway, because it tears through the thin channel and rips open the top of the bag, making it impossible to re-tie
We use much nicer bags in our own facility.
This is not a bag I would willingly pay money for
And yes, the Members Mark bags of the same style are thicker
Did Glad change their production method for ForceFlex to make them tear more easily? It's been a few years since I worked in R&D, but the ForceFlex technology is stronger and less susceptible to tears vs. bags of similar thickness. Glad has a multitude of patents on the technology. The Hefty knock-offs have the issues you mention.
Did Glad change their production method for ForceFlex to make them tear more easily? It's been a few years since I worked in R&D, but the ForceFlex technology is stronger and less susceptible to tears vs. bags of similar thickness. Glad has a multitude of patents on the technology. The Hefty knock-offs have the issues you mention.
Not R&D; I just move boxes
Company gave away cases of forceflex a few years back, in some obnoxious scent or another. Hubby was seething after the first and only landfill run we did with them; demanded I get rid of them. Haven't used them since
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These are not for heavy garbage. They're OK for light stuff, or maybe to haul dry clothes back from the laundromat, but they're thin and the flex grid creates weak points that are more prone to tearing and spilling trash everywhere
The fact that they're stretchy means that if there's anything heavy in them, they'll stretch to the point it's difficult for an average- height person (say, 5'10" or shorter) to lift the bag enough to clear the ground without lifting from the bottom
If they're heavy you can't lift by the drawstring anyway, because it tears through the thin channel and rips open the top of the bag, making it impossible to re-tie
We use much nicer bags in our own facility.
This is not a bag I would willingly pay money for
And yes, the Members Mark bags of the same style are thicker
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Pro
I got 3 of these for $9 the last time.
Pro
I got 3 of these for $9 the last time.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
https://www.lowes.com/pd/Glad-Lar...500156931
These are not for heavy garbage. They're OK for light stuff, or maybe to haul dry clothes back from the laundromat, but they're thin and the flex grid creates weak points that are more prone to tearing and spilling trash everywhere
The fact that they're stretchy means that if there's anything heavy in them, they'll stretch to the point it's difficult for an average- height person (say, 5'10" or shorter) to lift the bag enough to clear the ground without lifting from the bottom
If they're heavy you can't lift by the drawstring anyway, because it tears through the thin channel and rips open the top of the bag, making it impossible to re-tie
We use much nicer bags in our own facility.
This is not a bag I would willingly pay money for
And yes, the Members Mark bags of the same style are thicker
These are not for heavy garbage. They're OK for light stuff, or maybe to haul dry clothes back from the laundromat, but they're thin and the flex grid creates weak points that are more prone to tearing and spilling trash everywhere
The fact that they're stretchy means that if there's anything heavy in them, they'll stretch to the point it's difficult for an average- height person (say, 5'10" or shorter) to lift the bag enough to clear the ground without lifting from the bottom
If they're heavy you can't lift by the drawstring anyway, because it tears through the thin channel and rips open the top of the bag, making it impossible to re-tie
We use much nicer bags in our own facility.
This is not a bag I would willingly pay money for
And yes, the Members Mark bags of the same style are thicker
Company gave away cases of forceflex a few years back, in some obnoxious scent or another. Hubby was seething after the first and only landfill run we did with them; demanded I get rid of them. Haven't used them since