Classification Details
| NMFC | Description | Class |
|---|---|---|
| 160730.00 | Pontoons, NOI, SU: | |
| 160730.01 | Aluminum, in boxes or crates | 400 |
| 160730.02 | Plastic, in boxes or crates | 400 |
| 160730.03 | Steel: | |
| 160730.04 | 2 gauge or thicker | 100 |
| 160730.05 | Thinner than 2 gauge | 200 |
How to Determine Your Class
To find the correct freight class for your shipment:
- Specify construction and condition on the BOL (aluminum, plastic, or composite; set-up, capped, with valves) to support the correct class within 100–400.
- Crate or box pontoons using V-blocks, foam, and cross-bracing; add fork-entry runners and banding points so tines and straps don’t press on weld seams.
- Plan for length handling and accessorials: note pieces over 96 inches, request long-freight care, and arrange liftgate or crane if docks can’t handle the size.
- Protect surfaces with non-abrasive wrap and corner guards; stencil “Do Not Fork” on curved sections and include photos/dimensions to prevent reclass delays.
Note: All classifications are subject to Item 170. Verify with official NMFC publications for the most current requirements.
Business Value
- Accurate class selection across 100–400 avoids reclass fees and yields tighter LTL quotes for pontoons.
- Engineered crating reduces crush and puncture claims on hollow, buoyant bodies, cutting damage costs and cycle time.
- Right-sized crates improve stackability and cubic efficiency, often unlocking better freight rates and fewer oversize charges.
- Non-hazardous status broadens carrier options and simplifies tendering, improving schedule reliability and transit speed.