Classification Details
| NMFC | Description | Class |
|---|---|---|
| 12420.00 | Wheels, without tires, in boxes or crates, or Wheels, with tires mounted, loose or in packages | 85 |
How to Determine Your Class
To find the correct freight class for your shipment:
- Choose the right method: bare aircraft wheels go in boxes or crates; tire-mounted wheel assemblies may ship loose or packaged. Secure loose pieces with chocks and pallet straps to prevent rolling.
- Protect precision surfaces. Cap bearing bores, guard bead seats and brake rotor faces, and use VCI wrap or corrosion inhibitor. Add edge protectors under banding to avoid rim damage.
- Palletize upright in cradles or wheel rings; avoid stacking. Strap with soft webbing, not chains, and mark lift points. For loose shipments, wedge and block the wheel so it cannot move.
- Label clearly: “Aircraft Wheel Assembly – NMFC 12420 Class 85.” Include part/serial numbers and MRO tags so carriers and receivers can match units quickly and avoid delays.
Note: All classifications are subject to Item 170. Verify with official NMFC publications for the most current requirements.
Business Value
- Predictable rating: fixed Class 85 means stable LTL quotes without density calculations, reducing rating disputes and surprise reclasses.
- Operational flexibility: ability to ship mounted wheels loose or packaged speeds AOG responses and shortens turnaround for MROs and airlines.
- Lower damage risk: packaging guidance (crates, bore caps, edge guards) cuts claim rates and protects high-value aviation hardware.
- Cost control: pair or set consolidation on a single pallet improves cube efficiency, and non-hazardous status avoids hazmat surcharges.