Classification Details
| NMFC | Description | Class |
|---|---|---|
| 181250.00 | Grease Kits or Tanks, metal, hand or power, with or without pumps or hose, in boxes, crates or drums | 100 |
How to Determine Your Class
To find the correct freight class for your shipment:
- Ship tanks and kits dry and cleaned; cap all ports and vents. Bag pumps and hoses to contain oil residue, and add absorbent pads inside the box or crate.
- Choose packaging by weight: heavy welded tanks in a wood crate, lighter kits in reinforced boxes. Mount crates to skids for forklift entry and mark center of gravity if top-heavy.
- Block and brace inside the container so fittings and handles cannot pierce the walls. Use foam, corrugated edge guards, and steel or poly banding around the crate.
- Label NMFC 181250, Class 100, non-hazardous hardware. Note piece count and orientation (“This End Up”), and avoid pallet overhang to prevent damage fees.
Note: All classifications are subject to Item 170. Verify with official NMFC publications for the most current requirements.
Business Value
- Fixed Class 100 simplifies quoting and avoids density reclass—predictable LTL rates for both single tanks and full kit assemblies.
- Non-hazardous hardware status broadens carrier options and eliminates hazmat surcharges when shipping empty, clean equipment.
- Boxed or crated packaging reduces OS&D risk for pumps, hose reels, and fittings, helping cut claim costs and downtime in the shop.
- Consistent NMFC usage streamlines audits and documentation, minimizing rebills and accelerating tender-to-pickup cycles across multi-location networks.