Dollar tree stealing cascade pacs & repackaging them and selling

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maytaga806

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 20, 2012
Messages
692
Location
Howell, Michigan
I recently found out that dollar tree is taking old Cascade platinum PACs and they are throwing them in their dollar tree dish pac containers and selling them for cheap. Watch this video. If you love Cascade Platinum and you’d like to stop wasting so much cash on them, this is for you! Multiple people did reviews on these and were surprised when they opened the container that they were indeed cascade platinum pacs stolen by dollar tree and resold in their own containers.

 
Haven't been to any of our Dollar Trees or any other Dollar Stores since long after nothing else was a dollar, or less...

 

The trend is now things below $5, of which I reckon, stores like Five-Below are going to be much more common for Bargain/Discount Dealers, much like when we lost our Five & Dime, or just Dime Stores...

 

Ditto for the stuff you get there, at least knock-off generic brands which among the labelling must be what you all along were paying the higher price for buying "real things"...

 

 

 

-- Dave
 
 
Is the container normally sealed with plastic film or some such?  She could have swapped-in the Cascade packs.

The container isn't branded as Dollar Tree.  Does Dollar Tree have a house-brand?

A search for "dishwasher packs with hydroclean action" finds a few listings on eBay for the SAME product/container.  The photos show:
  Distributed by
  X.P.G. Company
  Feichang, Shandong
  Made in P.R. China

Searching DollarTree.com for dishwasher detergent finds only a 4-ct package of Cascade-branded packs ... although that is not to say a Dollar Tree store doesn't stock other choices.

I've never been in the local Dollar Tree.  Perhaps should have a look-see.
 
First and foremost thing to remember is these TikTok and other "content creators" make money from clicks and other traffic from their sites.

This so called "deal" on Cascade pods broke sometime in middle or late last year and has been an ongoing thing ever since.

Another TikTok "expert" or whatever chimed in that these pods are "rejects" or otherwise product that didn't meet P&G's standards so somehow a wholesaler got a hold of them, from there (allegedly) in came Dollar Tree.


 
Probably. They are stale pacs for sure, the white powder in them has yellowed which happens when they sit forever. My new dishwasher came with a pac of them and they were yellowed but worked fine and also it didn’t oversuds my machine like a fresh one would do easily in my soft water.
 
P&G along with others long have had ways or channels to move "stale" products or things otherwise pulled from shelves. That or stock that was otherwise surplus to requirements.

In days before internet one went to discounters such as Nationwide Warehouse, Big Lots and similar places. This still happens world over. If one knows or knew where to look there are places with shelves full of laundry detergents, fabric softeners and other household cleaning products at reasonable prices.

Stores get their stash from wholesalers that have purchased said stock.

Things are pretty much same today but with rise of new technology tons of this "old" or whatever stock is flogged on eBay and other online retailers or auction sites.

H-Bid alone has tons of products from Amazon, Target and other retailers that are shelf pulls, overstock and so forth.

Thing is when buying "stale" products one must be aware they may not perform well as new. Ingredients do break down or contents become otherwise unstable. This is particularly true for anything liquid.

You see tons of hand sanitizers, liquid chlorine bleach, liquid laundry detergents, liquid fabric softeners, liquid alone and or with powder pods/pacs and so forth on Hi-Bid and other places. What one doesn't know (but could likely find out by calling P&G or whoever CS and giving code from container) is how old stuff happens to be.

Chlorine bleach deteriorates into basically saltwater. Fabric softeners can go gloppy and curdle like bad Hollandaise sauce. Hydrogen peroxide breaks down into basically water. And so it goes..

One finds first thing often to go with "stale" products is scent, especially liquid products such as laundry detergents or fabric softeners.

Made mistake of stocking up on Vernel "Rose" fabric softener with result out of several bottles only got to use barely one. Stuff congeled and lost scent from lying about spare for long period of time. Ditto for two bottles of Ariel "Alpine Fresh". Scent is still somewhat alive in bottles, but after washing is dried there's nothing.
 

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