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NMFC 137150 - Mica Blocks, Sheets, Flakes | Class 50-400

Article ID
137150
Mica forms under NMFC Item 137150
Freight Group
UNGROUPED ARTICLES
Ungrouped, density-driven mineral commodity listing
Class Range
50-400 13 classifications
Class 50-400 determined by measured density
Hazardous
No
Non-hazardous mineral; standard carrier handling

Classification Details

NMFC Description Class
137150.00 Show more
137150.01 Less than 1 400
137150.02 1 but less than 2 300
137150.03 2 but less than 4 250
137150.04 4 but less than 6 175
137150.05 6 but less than 8 125
137150.06 8 but less than 10 100
137150.07 10 but less than 12 92.5
137150.08 12 but less than 15 85
137150.09 15 but less than 22.5 70
137150.10 22.5 but less than 30 65
137150.11 30 but less than 35 60
137150.12 35 but less than 50 55
137150.13 50 or greater 50

Notes

Note 137151: NOTE-Applies only on blocks, pieces or plates which have been subjected only to cobbing by hammer.

How to Determine Your Class

To find the correct freight class for your shipment:

  1. Identify the exact mica form before booking: crude/scrap, flakes/splittings, sheets or built-up blocks (see Note item 137152), rough cobbed (see Note item 137151), schist, dry- or wet-ground, or pulverized. Packaging varies by form and affects density.
  2. Measure density for class selection: record the total weight and the external cube of each shipping unit (L x W x H in inches ÷ 1728). Example: 48x40x30 in = 33.3 cu ft; at 1,000 lb, density ≈ 30.0 pcf. Use Item 170 density breaks to determine the class between 50–400.
  3. Package to the correct spec: use sturdy boxes with inner containers for ground or wet-ground mica; add liners to keep fines contained and moisture out. For sheets/blocks, protect edges and faces with corner guards and rigid pads, then secure to pallets.
  4. Document clearly on the BOL: “Mica, NMFC 137150, [form], [packaging], density [pcf].” If shipping forms covered by notes (e.g., built-up blocks or rough cobbed), confirm the applicable note and packaging to avoid reclassification.

Note: All classifications are subject to Item 170. Verify with official NMFC publications for the most current requirements.

Business Value

  • Optimize density to lower freight class and LTL rates; tighter pack-outs and fewer oversized boxes can shift shipments toward Class 50–100.
  • Accurate form identification (sheet, flake, ground, schist) and proper boxing minimize carrier inspections, reclass fees, and delay-related costs.
  • Single NMFC item covering multiple mica forms streamlines mixed-load tenders and simplifies pricing across vendors and lanes.
  • Non-hazardous status broadens carrier options and speeds tender acceptance, improving capacity access and transit reliability.