Classification Details
| NMFC | Description | Class |
|---|---|---|
| 139920.00 | Plate, Sheet or Strip: |
Notes
Note 139921: NOTE-Finished surfaces liable to damage must be adequately protected from marring, scratching, abrasion or similar damage.
How to Determine Your Class
To find the correct freight class for your shipment:
- State the exact alloy and form on the BOL—pure nickel (200/201) or nickel alloy (e.g., Monel, Inconel), plate vs sheet vs strip, thickness and finish—to avoid reclass.
- Package sheets as tight, edge-protected bundles on sturdy skids; use interleaves to prevent scratching and band with corner guards. Mark “Do Not Top Load” for pristine finishes.
- For coils, provide ID/OD/width and use through-eye banding with blocking to stop rolling. Add coil cradles or racks if the terminal lacks coil-friendly equipment.
- Match skid footprint to material size so edges don’t overhang, and flag sharp edges. Wrap with VCI and poly to keep moisture off and prevent staining during transit.
Note: All classifications are subject to Item 170. Verify with official NMFC publications for the most current requirements.
Business Value
- Clear alloy and packaging detail speeds rating and reduces costly reclass and rebill disputes when class varies by material and pack.
- Damage control: proper edge protection, interleaves, and crating cut surface defects, avoiding rework, polishing, or scrap loss.
- Operational efficiency: standard pallet footprints and coil cradles streamline cross-dock handling, lowering accessorials and shortening dwell.
- Risk mitigation for high-value nickel: sealed crates and precise NMFC use support claims, while non-hazardous status avoids hazmat fees.