Why do straws have stripes on them?

Almost every plastic straw I’ve seen has a red stripe along one side. The ones at McDonald’s have a red stripe on one side and a yellow stripe on the other. Some, like the solid blue kind, have no stripe at all.

It seems like painting the stripe on must add complexity to the straw-making process. Couldn’t they eliminate entire machines from the production line by getting rid of the stripes? What’s it for, anyway, and if stripes are useful enough to justify the cost, why don’t all straws have them?

musta been some patriot that started it who didn’t know the difference from stars and stripes… and thought the country meant straws and stripes… fer instance, even a certain president we know wouldn’t know the difference… :smiley:

They make the liquid rise faster… derr…

I’m not Nikstlitslepmur and can’t tell you anything about how gold turns into straws, but I can say in the case of McDonald’s, they are happy to pay the expense (which I don’t think is much, anyway), in order to have a distinctive and recognizable straw as part of their packaging.

Are the stripes actually painted on or are they part of the plastic? - if the latter, this could just mean that the straw is extruded (or whatever) from a machine that has four nozzles; two coloured and two clear.

As to the reason; aesthetics mostly I suspect , but there might be a practical side: as you bend down to pick up that McMorsel that dropped on the floor (and don’t tell me you don’t do this), coloured straws are easier to see and avoid poking your eye out.

Ooo HA HA HA. This is too much. For heaven’s sake. I just got out of bed and being confronted with world shocking questions- and their answers- is more than I can bear.

**coffee !!! ** :slight_smile:

Drinking coffee with a straw could be dangerous, bud.

The stripes used to be a lot twistier too. They used to go around the straw a few times. Now they’re almost straight stripes; no fun!

I miss drinking with Crazy Straws, you know, the kind that look like they’ll turn into knots if you pull on both ends…

Stripes are…fun!

http://www.diamondbrands.com/forsterstraws.html

Käse, this is serious! :slight_smile:

Cutting open a straw reveals there is no color on the inside. Aha: painted on.

…Any normal guy would have stopped here, but we are dopers, dammit! :slight_smile: Putting it under a microscope (what do you mean, “weird”?) reveals the coloring reaches about a quarter into the plastic, so my guess is it’s like striped tooth paste: One tube extrusion nozzle with holes or channels around, melting colored plastic on (and partly into) the main tube.

That is because they were made by wrapping paper in a spiral pattern. Therefore it was easy to use a strip of paper with one colored edge and the spiral stripe would be formed on the straw. Plastic straws being extruded can more easily be made with stripes running straight down the straw.

This is all you ever wanted to know about Crazy Straws. :cool:

Thank you, thank you all. No, I mean it. Thank you.

femtosecond What about the DNA on the straw?

So pleased with this solved puzzle :slight_smile:

The purpose of the stripes is to discharge static electricity. Plastic is a good insulator, and the stripes are made of a dielectric material which will safely discharge any difference in potential between your lips and the drink before the liquid has time to make it’s way up the straw and into your mouth, where it could cause a dangerous shock if left ungrounded.

Straws without the stripes are made of a type of plastic that incorporates dielectric material into the plastic itself, hence no need for the separate stripes. This type of plastic is more expensive than regular plastic, but the upside is the straws are cheaper to manufacture, which evens out in the end.

(Something tells me femtosecond is now going to test a straw with an ohmmeter.)

Anybody else just love tearing one end off the wrapper, and blowing that sucker across the room. Or is that just a stupid question?

The stripes are there to remind people to put the straw into the drink lengthwise rather than trying to shove it in sideways, of course.

BTW, if you frequent places that have happy hour and they use those big toothpicks with fluffy plastic on one end, straws make excellent little blowguns. Just thought you should know.

Stripes are from the days of paper straws, which you could peel and unroll along the stripes.
The first plastic straws had vertical stripes to have a similar look, which then moved to diagonal as they got better at patterning.

Now of course, the reason to be similar is gone, since paper isn’t the market leader to compete with.

Mr2001-"*It seems like painting the stripe on must add complexity to the straw-making process. *"

Imagine what they must go through to make the “bendy” straws!

Mhh. My straws have four stripes… A quadruple helix! It’s alive! :eek: