New Pig PLR412 Drain Cover Review
Affiliate disclosure: WC Safety earns a commission on qualifying Amazon purchases at no extra cost to you.
Every written spill plan says 'protect the drain' — the PLR412 is the mat that actually does it. Thrown over a round storm drain at the start of a response, it seals the path to the waterway while socks and pads work the spill. The difference between a cleanup and a reportable release often comes down to whether this mat was staged.
Editorial rating: 4.7/5. The cheapest insurance in environmental compliance — stage one at every drain cluster.
New Pig PLR412 Drain Cover — current price and availability on Amazon:
Check Price on Amazon →Key specs
| Model | PLR412 |
| Fits | Round drains up to 6 in dia |
| Size | 60 x 36 in |
| Use | Seals the drain during a spill |
Listed at $176.99 on Amazon when we captured pricing (2026-07-16) — the button shows the live price.
Who it's for
Any facility whose floor or yard drains connect to storm systems — which is nearly every facility with outdoor drum traffic or fuel handling.
Skip it if
Square or oversized drains; match the cover format to your actual drain census before buying.
Where it fits
Containment is passive compliance — it works every hour you're not looking, which is what regulators actually want to see. Start with the full collection overview for the selection logic.
How it compares
vs New Pig PLR230 dike: steer the spill away from the drain instead. (Full take: New Pig PLR230 dike review.)
vs New Pig socks: the containment that works alongside it. (Full take: New Pig socks review.)
Pros and cons
Pros
- Seals the storm-drain path instantly
- Reusable response tool, not a consumable
- New Pig build quality
Cons
- Round-drain format — census your drains first
- Needs to be staged nearby to matter
- One drain per mat
Build out the response corner
Stage chemical-resistant gloves and splash goggles with every kit, size the program with the spill kit calculator, and keep the full range in view at the spill control collection with rankings in Best Spill Kits 2026; facility quantities route via bulk & business orders.
Bottom line: if the New Pig PLR412 Drain Cover fits your setup, check the live listing:
Check Price on Amazon →Related reviews
- review: new pig plr230 spill barrier dike
- review: new pig oil only absorbent boom 5in 10ft
- review: eagle 4 drum spill containment platform
- review: new pig kit21 universal spill kit bucket
- review: new pig kit236 30 gallon overpack spill kit
- review: new pig heavyweight absorbent mat pads 100ct
- review: new pig absorbent sock 4ft
- review: global industrial 2 drum spill platform
- review: stardust oil only spill kit
FAQ
Universal vs oil-only sorbents — which do I stock?
Universal absorbs everything including water; oil-only repels water and floats. Indoors mixed fluids: universal. Outdoors, near drains, or on water: oil-only.
What does OSHA require for spill response?
No specific kit — hazard-appropriate response capability (HAZWOPER for emergency response) plus prompt cleanup. EPA SPCC and fire codes drive containment requirements.
What's the correct spill response order?
PPE first, stop the source, contain the spread (socks, booms, dikes, drain covers), absorb with pads, dispose per the SDS. Containment before absorption — spills outrun pads.
How do drain covers fit the plan?
A spill that reaches a storm drain becomes a reportable environmental event in most jurisdictions. Sealing the drain at minute one is the single highest-leverage response move — which is why covers stage next to the kit, not in a cabinet.
How is used absorbent disposed of?
As what it absorbed: used-oil rules for petroleum, hazardous-waste rules for listed chemicals. Bag, label, segregate — the SDS drives it.
When is secondary containment required under drums?
When stored liquids could reach drains or soil — EPA SPCC, RCRA, and fire codes all land there for their categories. Sump capacity typically covers the largest container.
What PPE stages with spill response gear?
Chemical-resistant gloves matched to your liquids, splash eye protection, and the right respirator cartridge for volatile chemicals.
How often is response gear inspected?
Monthly, on a tag like extinguishers, plus restock or redeploy after any use. Reusable containment (dikes, drain covers) gets cleaned and returned to staging.
Berm, boom, or sock — which contains what?
Socks handle floor-scale spread; booms scale up to outdoor volume and float on water; physical dikes wall off running spills without absorbing. Most facilities eventually stage all three tiers.
Can I skip containment and just use pads?
Pads absorb where they lie — a moving spill outruns them toward the drain. Contain first; the pads then work inside a boundary instead of chasing one.
What about spills reaching a storm drain?
Reportable in most jurisdictions — the exact scenario drain covers and dikes exist to prevent. Prevention hardware costs less than one incident report.
Does WC Safety earn from these links?
Yes — as an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you. Prices captured 2026-07-16/17; the live listing governs.
Platform, dike, or drain cover — which containment first?
Census your risks: drums → platforms; running-spill paths → dikes; storm drains → covers. Most facilities need all three; buy in the order your spill map says.
Does the sump or berm need maintenance?
Yes — inspect and drain collected liquid periodically per its SDS. Full containment is no containment.
Are these reusable?
Platforms, dikes, and drain covers are duration hardware — clean after events and restage. Only the sorbents are consumable.
How we review
Spec-honest methodology: manufacturer data plus the live Amazon listing, listing-only claims flagged "per the listing," and honest category limits stated — including that cameras are security tools with no OSHA compliance role, and that ratings must be verified against your own site's requirements. No fabricated testing.
Reviewed by Steven Eaton, WC Safety. Pricing captured 2026-07-16.
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