PTFE DrumRight™ Liners | Drum & Bucket Liners

PTFE DrumRight™ Liners | Drum & Bucket Liners
  • Material Composition: PTFE fluoropolymer liner material with conductive and food-grade configurations.
  • Size/Capacity Range: Designed for 5-gallon buckets and 55-gallon drums.
  • Compliance/Ratings: Conductive non-food-grade liners for anti-static applications; food-grade PTFE liner options available.
  • Closure Types: Heavy-duty formed liner design for drum and bucket container interiors.
  • Product Types: 55-gallon conductive PTFE liners, 55-gallon food-grade PTFE liners, 5-gallon conductive bucket liners, and 5-gallon food-grade bucket liners.
Heavy-duty PTFE DrumRight™ drum and bucket liners are formed fluoropolymer inserts used for demanding storage, mixing, and material handling applications. This section includes 55-gallon conductive PTFE drum liners, 55-gallon food-grade PTFE drum liners, 5-gallon conductive PTFE bucket liners, and 5-gallon food-grade PTFE bucket liners. PTFE, also known as polytetrafluoroethylene, provides chemical resistance, release properties, and temperature resistance up to 550°F in the conductive liner material. Conductive versions are non-food-grade and used for anti-static applications. Selection depends on container size, chemical exposure, temperature, food-contact needs, static-control requirements, and cleaning process.
Product Comparison Chart
Product Capacity Liner Type Material / Rating Application
55 Gallon, Conductive - Heavy-Duty (PTFE) DrumRight™ Liners 55 gallon Conductive drum liner PTFE fluoropolymer / conductive / non-food-grade Anti-static drum lining for chemicals, industrial materials, and static-control applications
55 Gallon, Food Grade - Heavy-Duty (PTFE) DrumRight™ Liners 55 gallon Food-grade drum liner PTFE fluoropolymer / food-grade configuration Food-related drum lining where chemical resistance and product release are required
5 Gallon Conductive - Heavy-Duty (PTFE) DrumRight™ Bucket Liner 5 gallon Conductive bucket liner PTFE fluoropolymer / conductive / non-food-grade Anti-static bucket lining for smaller batch handling and static-sensitive materials
5 Gallon, Food Grade - Heavy-Duty (PTFE) DrumRight™ Bucket Liner 5 gallon Food-grade bucket liner PTFE fluoropolymer / food-grade configuration Food-related bucket lining for small-batch processing, storage, and cleanup reduction


Conductive and Food-Grade PTFE Liner Configurations Heavy-duty PTFE DrumRight™ liners are configured for 5-gallon buckets and 55-gallon drums where standard polyethylene liners may not provide enough chemical resistance, release performance, or temperature tolerance. Conductive liners are used in anti-static applications where static buildup must be controlled during filling, mixing, storage, or material removal. These conductive versions are identified as non-food-grade. Food-grade PTFE liners are used where the liner must support food-related handling requirements. The formed liner design provides a structured barrier inside the container and can support repeated use when the liner remains compatible with the contents and cleaning method. PTFE Fluoropolymer Construction PTFE, or polytetrafluoroethylene, is a fluoropolymer material known for chemical resistance, low surface adhesion, and thermal stability. In drum and bucket liners, PTFE provides a barrier between the container and the material being handled. This helps reduce contamination risk, residue buildup, and container cleaning requirements. The conductive PTFE liner material is rated for temperatures up to 550°F and is used where anti-static performance is required. The material is flexible and tear-resistant enough for formed liner use while maintaining release properties that support cleaning and product removal. Performance depends on chemical compatibility, fill temperature, handling stress, liner fit, and cleaning procedure.

Food-Grade, Conductive, and Temperature Requirements PTFE liner selection should account for food-contact status, static-control requirements, and operating temperature. Food-grade DrumRight™ liners should be used where the application involves food, ingredients, or material handling processes requiring food-contact liner construction. Conductive liners are non-food-grade and are used for anti-static applications where static discharge may create a handling concern. These liners should be part of a broader static-control process that may include grounding, bonding, humidity control, and facility safety procedures. Temperature exposure should be checked against the liner rating, container rating, and contents. Used liners may require controlled disposal if they contact regulated chemicals or waste.

Use Across Chemical, Food, Pharmaceutical, and Batch Processing Operations Heavy-duty PTFE DrumRight™ liners are used in chemical processing, food manufacturing, pharmaceutical operations, coatings, adhesives, resins, laboratory work, and industrial batch handling. Chemical facilities use PTFE liners where aggressive materials require more resistance than standard polyethylene liners. Food processors use food-grade PTFE liners for compatible ingredients, syrups, oils, pastes, or batch materials where product release and clean handling are important. Pharmaceutical and laboratory operations may use PTFE liners where contamination control and chemical compatibility are required. Conductive versions are used with static-sensitive materials in industrial settings where anti-static performance is part of the handling process.

Technical Factors for Buyers Buyers should first choose the correct container size: 5-gallon bucket or 55-gallon drum. The next decision is liner configuration. Conductive PTFE liners should be selected for anti-static applications, but they are non-food-grade. Food-grade PTFE liners should be selected where food-contact handling is required. Chemical compatibility should be reviewed before use with acids, solvents, caustics, coatings, adhesives, resins, or high-temperature materials. Temperature should be checked against the stated 550°F conductive liner material rating and the limits of the container and contents. Buyers should also consider product release needs, cleaning method, fill weight, liner reuse, residue classification, and disposal procedures.
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