Masking Tape vs Electrical Tape & More: Real Answers from a Procurement Pro
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Masking Tape vs Electrical Tape & Other Gorilla Custom Questions
- Can I use masking tape instead of electrical tape?
- What's the difference between gorilla tape and regular duct tape?
- How do I order custom printed boxes with gorilla?
- Are gorilla glue cbd and gorilla glue silicone related to gorilla tape?
- What's the minimum order quantity for custom stickers?
- How do I save money on packaging supplies?
- Why should I consolidate my vendors?
Masking Tape vs Electrical Tape & Other Gorilla Custom Questions
I manage all the packaging, tape, and printed materials ordering for a mid-size company—around $15,000 annually across 6 vendors. Over the last 3 years I've fielded a lot of questions from colleagues and internal clients. Here are the ones that keep coming up, answered from a procurement perspective.
Can I use masking tape instead of electrical tape?
Short answer: probably not for anything electrical. I made that mistake once—used standard masking tape to bundle some wires temporarily. A week later the adhesive had melted and the tape was peeling off. Electrical tape is designed to resist heat and provide insulation; masking tape is basically a low-tack painter's helper.
If you're in a pinch for a non-electrical application like labeling boxes, sure, masking tape works. But I've learned the hard way: buying the right tape the first time saves rework. We now stock both and label them clearly. Our gorilla tape products include heavy-duty options that bridge that gap—but for live wires, stick to UL-listed electrical tape.
What's the difference between gorilla tape and regular duct tape?
I'm not a materials scientist, but from a user perspective: gorilla tape has a much thicker adhesive layer that bonds to rough surfaces (concrete, brick) where duct tape slides off. The downside? It's harder to tear by hand—you'll want scissors. We switched to gorilla tape for our shipping department after the third time duct tape failed on corrugated boxes in humid weather. Our return rate dropped noticeably.
That said, gorilla tape costs about 40% more per roll. For our volume (~200 rolls/year), the cost difference is maybe $400 annually—worth it to avoid re-taping. But if you're just taping wrapping paper, don't bother.
How do I order custom printed boxes with gorilla?
We've used gorilla custom for our shipping boxes since 2024. The process: upload your logo and dimensions on their site, pick quantity (minimum 50 for box orders), and done. Turnaround is about 5-7 business days for standard sizes. For custom die-cut boxes, they'll send a proof that takes 1-2 days.
What I like: their online system shows live estimated delivery dates based on my quantity—no back-and-forth emails. It's cut our ordering time from 30 minutes to about 8 minutes per order. The most frustrating part? Matching color to our brand blue (Pantone 286 C). I had to order a physical swatch first because screen colors are misleading. They sent me a free chip pack, so no cost, but it delayed the first order by a week.
Are gorilla glue cbd and gorilla glue silicone related to gorilla tape?
This comes up surprisingly often in search. Gorilla Glue is a separate brand known for super glue and epoxy. Gorilla Glue CBD is a completely different product line (hemp-derived gummies with CBD, not tape). And Gorilla Glue Silicone is a sealant product. We don't sell those—our focus is packaging, tape, boxes, and custom printing. If someone on our team accidentally orders that, it goes back. Stick to gorilla custom for packaging; keep the glue line for construction projects.
What's the minimum order quantity for custom stickers?
For standard die-cut stickers (2"x2" and up): 25 pieces. For larger runs, pricing drops around 100 pieces and again at 500. We ordered 500 business card-sized stickers for a trade show—cost was $87 including shipping. Setup was free because we used an online artwork template. Pro tip: upload a vector file (AI or EPS) to avoid resolution issues—our first order had pixelated edges because I sent a 100 DPI JPEG. The customer service team caught it before production and asked for a higher-res file. Saved me from a bad batch.
How do I save money on packaging supplies?
After 3 years and about 180 orders, I've come to believe that the biggest savings come from vendor consolidation, not unit price shopping. We used to buy tape from one supplier, boxes from another, labels from a third. The total invoice processing time ate up any price advantage. Now we order about 70% of our supplies from gorilla custom—tape, boxes, and stickers—and the rest from a local supplier for specialty items. Our accounting team estimates this cut 6 hours per month of purchase order matching.
For tape specifically: buying full rolls (60-yard) instead of smaller (30-yard) is cheaper per yard, but only if you have the storage space. We don't—our supply closet fits only the small rolls. So I accept a small premium for convenience. Not every efficiency gain is a cost reduction.
Why should I consolidate my vendors?
I'll give you a concrete example: In 2023 I ordered 50 custom boxes from a different supplier because gorilla was out of stock. The box quality was fine, but they sent a hand-typed invoice with no line items. Accounting rejected the expense. I had to spend 2 hours chasing down a proper invoice—and the vendor ghosted me. I ate the $120 out of my department's petty cash. Now I only work with vendors who have automated invoicing. Gorilla custom's system sends an itemized invoice with PO numbers automatically. That's worth the price difference right there.
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