Medium Duty All-Purpose Silage Stretch Film | Baleguard
Medium Duty All-Purpose Silage Stretch Film fits forage programs with moderate climate exposure, controlled handling, and standard storage duration. It is the practical choice when the farm needs an all-purpose wrap but does not need the higher specification of heavy-duty or machine-focused blown film.
Best-fit applications
General haylage, baleage, and mixed forage programs where storage risk is moderate and the buyer needs reliable value rather than a premium heavy-duty film.
- Cost-effective baleage and haylage programs
- Mixed forage farms with moderate storage risk
- Dealer stocking programs for all-purpose conventional silage film
- Farms balancing feed value protection with seasonal budget control
Spec and quote parameters
| Film family | Medium-duty conventional silage stretch film |
|---|---|
| Primary use | All-purpose baleage and forage preservation |
| Best fit | Moderate climate, standard storage, mixed forage farms |
| Performance focus | Feed value, efficiency, profitability, everyday reliability |
| Quote parameters | Micron thickness, roll size, stretch capacity, cling level, UV rating, color, recommended layers |
Selection criteria
- Use when climate exposure, puncture risk, and storage length are moderate.
- Confirm the farm is still applying enough layers and protecting the film from punctures after wrapping.
- Upgrade to heavy-duty or blown film when spoilage, breakage, or rough storage conditions increase risk.
Buyer questions
When is medium-duty silage film enough?
Medium-duty film is often enough when bales are wrapped correctly, storage time is moderate, puncture risk is controlled, and the climate is not extreme.
How can silage film protect feed value profitably?
The film must create a reliable oxygen barrier, maintain cling, and prevent avoidable spoilage without forcing the farm into a higher specification than the risk requires.
Should farms choose medium-duty or heavy-duty bale wrap?
Choose medium-duty for controlled, moderate programs; choose heavy-duty when climate, bale shape, handling, or long storage makes film failure more expensive.
Quote inputs
Bale count, Crop type, Storage length, Layer target, Budget range, Film color, Seasonal volume.