Is this the worst p...
 

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[Closed] Is this the worst product packaging method EVER?

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[img] [/img]

Fiddly, messy, annoying bastards.

Deep breath.

(licks spread cheese from fingers)


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:25 am
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Possibly. But it may also be the worst cheese-impersonating snack product EVER, so there's some consistency there at least. 🙂


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:26 am
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I think the worst packaging is where you have 2 conformally moulded sheets of clear plastic enclosing the item and welded together. Sometimes the 2 halves are stuck so well you risk slicing yourself, either with the knife you use to hack them apart, or on the wickedly sharp edges formed 🙁


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:29 am
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Those wires that kids toys are packaged with in boxes.

Just have to attack with scissors or any other sharp object to set the toy free!


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:30 am
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...you see that little red tab on the side, try pulling it!! 😉


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:33 am
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I thought this thread was about this:

simonfbarnes - Member
I think the worst packaging is where you have 2 conformally moulded sheets of clear plastic enclosing the item and welded together. Sometimes the 2 halves are stuck so well you risk slicing yourself, either with the knife you use to hack them apart, or on the wickedly sharp edges formed

Definitely the worst. Or DVD/CD wrappers that are impossible to remove.


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:34 am
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You take the packaging off? I thought that was the product, and the vile curd inside was just some weird internal strengthening device...


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:35 am
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sfb has it. Those things are a pain. Dairylea triangles are an act of genius. tear off a small corner and pipe it out like cake icing, see if you can get it all out before it splits.


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:36 am
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I think the worst packaging is where you have 2 conformally moulded sheets of clear plastic enclosing the item and welded together. Sometimes the 2 halves are stuck so well you risk slicing yourself, either with the knife you use to hack them apart, or on the wickedly sharp edges formed

What he said. No need to waste money on military hardware; just send your enemies loads of highly desirable items packaged in this fashion, then simply walk in after they've all stabbed themselves and severed arteries etc, they won't be in any position to fight then. Might be a bit messy though.

And the memory card I bought online; packaged on card, about 6x4", 1/2" thick. Came in a box 12x8x10". Insanity.


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:36 am
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I think the worst packaging is where you have 2 conformally moulded sheets of clear plastic enclosing the item and welded together.

Blister packs. I saw a special knife / tool thing for opening these things once, for sale in Tebay services if memory serves. It was packaged in ... a blister pack. Maybe they thought you'd buy two? o..O


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:39 am
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Those wires that kids toys are packaged with in boxes.

Just have to attack with scissors or any other sharp object to set the toy free!

I just turn the box over and unwind the wires, but each to their own...


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:41 am
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What simonofbarnes said, how on earth are kids meant to open their toy cars etc when its a nigh on military operation for us to get the bloody thing opened!?


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:43 am
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And the best packaging

[img] [/img]

Theres something curiously rewarding about peeling a babybel


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:43 am
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I think the worst packaging is where you have 2 conformally moulded sheets of clear plastic enclosing the item and welded together

The reason they do that is to reduce product loss. By making the packaging super tough, they can guarantee hardly any packaging is going to be damaged and hence product loss is as low as it can be. At the expense of ease of opening...


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:44 am
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Blister packs, and it's always the sturdiest things come packaged like this, so a chisel, or hammer... but then eggs come in a box that a small child can crush...


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:45 am
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I just turn the box over and unwind the wires, but each to their own...

With an impatient kid bursting your head (you are a sicker/ better man than me)


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:45 am
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With an impatient kid bursting your head (you are a sicker/ better man than me)

I like to make 'em wait, learning experience for them.

The blister packs and the CD packaging are pretty awful, but my personal vote goes for Bimbo crustless bread, which has the usual plastic outside, and then a second sealed inner plastic wrapper around the bread itself. Easy enough to open, but what a waste of plastic! (And yes, it's Bimbo bread, it doesn't sound as stupid in Spanish...)


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:50 am
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[url=

Your Enthusiasm[/url] (youtube link)


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:53 am
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my least favourite (along with those stupid plastic packages) is disco brake pad packs - heatshrink plastic around a non-uniform metal shape WITH A SPRING in it is bad enough... but the card on the back is so rigid, its impossible to use the 'slits' they put in it.
it may seem petty, but i'll not be buying them again. SSC pads are just as good, and have far better packaging!


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:54 am
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Sometimes the 2 halves are stuck so well you risk slicing yourself, either with the knife you use to hack them apart, or on the wickedly sharp edges formed

I once did exactly that, stabbed myself with the knife I was using to open a blister pack containing...

...drum roll...

...another kitchen knife. 😳


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:58 am
 Pook
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disco pads yes! Number of times I've bent the spring.....


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 11:01 am
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The reason they do that is to reduce product loss. By making the packaging super tough, they can guarantee hardly any packaging is going to be damaged and hence product loss is as low as it can be. At the expense of ease of opening...

I always thought it was to reduce returns - because most places say they'll do a refund if you return things in the original packaging, with that kind of thing, there is no chance you can open it and then change your mind?

Joe


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 11:05 am
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Theres something curiously rewarding about peeling a babybel

If you count eating a blob of tasteless wax as a reward. 😉


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 11:15 am
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The worst

[IMG] [/IMG]

The best

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 11:35 am
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Good method:

[img] [/img]

Don't know where to start, lump hammer and bolster method:

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 11:46 am
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coconuts are easy to open, one whack with a heavy knife will do it no problem, its just knowing where to hit it!


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 11:50 am
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Use one of these to open walnuts, excellent
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 11:58 am
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[img] [/img]
/p>

christ! your bowling ball could do with a clean... you will never get it to swerve nicely down the lane with all that crap on it.. 😆


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 12:07 pm
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Dont know about the worst, but the most wasteful has to be Ergon grips with that specially moulded tube thing & the posh screws that just get binned. Totally stupid.


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 12:14 pm
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Rocky biscuits annoy me. Each one is wrapped individually, then wrapped into packs of 7, then another layer of plastic to make the 14 pack! I think it is to confuse the Geordies...


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 12:39 pm
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Those welded blister packs annoy me too. I've come very close indeed to badly slicing either myself or the product with a utility knife quite a few times. I now use a sharp pair of heavy duty scissors designed for cutting fiber optic cable. Still leaves sharp edges on the plastic, but no risk of a finger sliced to the bone.


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 5:19 pm
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PMSL @ Rootes! V.V.Funny! 😀


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 5:45 pm
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This is probably the worst packaging ever.
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 6:02 pm
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Fantastic


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 8:33 pm
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Back to the OP - simply bite a tiny hole in one corner then squeeze the cheese out like toothpaste. It's how I always used to eat it as a kid 🙂


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 8:49 pm
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agreed Mastiles. If you made the hole too small then squeezed it'd just pop, but get the hole just right and you get a long wiggly worm of cheese that'd go on for ages! you could write yer name in dairylea.


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 8:57 pm
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Kevevs and masty-fanny, you've both made me feel unwell 🙂


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 9:04 pm
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mountainbikers nationwide are now poking holes in dairylea triangles. Forget it, it's an art only a kid could master.


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 9:09 pm
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Back to the OP: they are easy to open. It ain't hard man. Just pull the red tab and one whole half of the tinfoil triangle comes away leaving your cheesefood-goo sitting proudly on the remaining half - ready to be eaten or hurled at the wall in disgust as you desire.


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 9:12 pm
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Jesus H christ. Kill yourselves. No really, kill yourselves. If you can't remove some simple packaging then you have to question both your contribution to society and your suitability to be allowed out with normal people.


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:33 pm
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what kind sick twisted bastid designed the packaging for these

[img] [/img]

The yoghurty side is bad enough when you get a little splash all over your new tie at lunch time but then, just when you try to open that second pocket for those balls of sweet chocolatey goodness, they roll all over your desk!


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 10:47 pm
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Jesus H christ. Kill yourselves. No really, kill yourselves. If you can't remove some simple packaging then you have to question both your contribution to society and your suitability to be allowed out with normal people.

it can be a close shave with those blister packs 🙁


 
Posted : 12/08/2010 11:01 pm
 DrJ
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I think the worst packaging is where you have 2 conformally moulded sheets of clear plastic enclosing the item and welded together.

Especially if you buy something from the airport duty free, so you have nothing sharp to open the package.


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 6:35 am
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I don't think I'll ever tire of the irony involved with people nearly mutilating themselves when opening this type of packaging containing something sharp.


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 7:45 am
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Dairylea.

Babybel.

Eat real cheese, FFS! You can just gnaw on a corner if you don't have thumbs.


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:01 am
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I don't think I'll ever tire of the irony involved

it would also be apt if scofflaw [b]samuri[/b] were given an infallible insomnia remedy in a blister pack and he bled to death frantically trying to get to it...


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:06 am
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Eat real cheese, FFS!

While I agree about Dairylea, surely Babybel [u]is[/u] a "real cheese"?
It's an edam that is made in France no?

Obviously there are nicer cheeses available, but it's a bit tricker to slip a couple of wedges of Stinking Bishop into your pocket for scoffing later 🙂


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:20 am
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It's an edam that is made in France no?

er, Nederlands...


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:21 am
 Rio
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surely Babybel is a "real cheese"?

[url= http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babybel ]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babybel[/url]

"Babybel is a processed cheese that is easily recognizable due to its distinctive red wax"

EDIT: not that Wikipedia is necessarily correct, of course! 🙂


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:23 am
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My printer toners - wrapped in some kind of puffy plastic that almost defeated our scissors.

Any plastic packaged prduct needing a knife/scissors (many)

Shrink wrapped fruit and veg

Caper jars - why are they so hard to undo?!


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:36 am
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Sainsburys' new frickin' cartons of chopped tomatoes. Damn near dislocated my indexfinger trying to tear the bastards. Going back to cans next.


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:39 am
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er, Nederlands...

From Rio's wiki link:
"The Bel Group (Groupe Bel) introduced Babybel in 1952... manufactured in Évron, in northwest France"


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:43 am
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I was in a sex shop in Paris a few years ago. They had a rubber ladies vajayjay for sale, called 'c**t in a box'. That has to rank as some of the worst packaging, in my humble opinion...


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:44 am
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Love their new ad campaign though. With all the little guys and the giant cow. 🙂


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:45 am
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@ mitch, it would go down well with the Plain English crowd though.


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:47 am
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It alledgly had 'real hair' stuck to it as well. Dont get me started...


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:48 am
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Love their new ad campaign though. With all the little guys and the giant cow.

Not seen it. But I guess you are not referring to BM’s French rubber vajayjays.


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:48 am
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allegedly

Yeah right mate 🙂


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:49 am
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😆 @ Sparry-the-Hider


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:50 am
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Why would little french men want a giant rubber cow vagina with hair on it?? [i]*confused*[/i]


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:50 am
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Sorry darcy, but even I, as one of the North's less discerning perverts, couldnt have done it. It looked like something from a medical curiosities museum.


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:51 am
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Methinks the Mitch doth protest too much :mrgreen:


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:52 am
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😳


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 10:53 am
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surely that's labelling, not packaging ?


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 11:01 am
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I did actually notice that simon, after I'd posted, but why let semantics get in the way of a story about a rubber fanny?


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 11:03 am
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why let semantics get in the way of a story about a rubber fanny?

I often find myself down the pub repeating those very words.


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 11:10 am
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I'll freely admit that I was extremely pleased with that particular line of prose darcy 😆


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 11:12 am
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So, does the French rubber ladygarden has any cheese in it?


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 11:19 am
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Now wondering I can slip james callaghan and a rubber fanny into the same conversation.........


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 11:22 am
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I'm kind of hoping it becomes as popular as 'owning with bombers' or 'weeing in shoes'. Just remember where you heard it first 😉


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 11:26 am
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Now wondering I can slip james callaghan and a rubber fanny into the same conversation.........

😯

It was marnsleybitch that brought up the rubber fanny!


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 11:39 am
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Heehee


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 11:40 am
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Prosthetic Volvos rule.

The one that starred in East is East was a real beauty.


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 12:01 pm
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Posted : 13/08/2010 12:09 pm
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^^^^ that'll be another [b]DON'T CLICK THIS[/b] 🙁 ^^^^

or, if you like: "Mark Datz's instant celibacy link"...


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 12:18 pm
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Mark Datz comes from a very, very dark place. That's minging


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 12:22 pm
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Pass the eye bleach, please...


 
Posted : 13/08/2010 12:23 pm