What Do The Markings On Wholesale Timber Pallets Depict?
Pallets are surprisingly helpful for the warehousing industry and several others where transportation and storage of products and goods are required. There are wholesale timbers of different types for different purposes. They are used for storing and transporting various goods and products, and most pallets have some markings that differentiate them from each other. Most people are unaware of these markings, and this is what we have covered in this blog post.
WHAT DO THE MARKING ON THESE PALLET COLLECTIONS MEAN?
Regardless of what you are using your pallets
for, you must be aware of these symbols and codes or the marks present on them.
All of them have some meaning, and understanding them will only make you use
wholesale timber pallets better.
WHAT IF THERE ARE NO MARKINGS ON PALLET COLLECTION AND DUNNAGE?
If no stamp, mark or code is mentioned, it means
that they are only national pallets and have not been treated. If nothing is
spilled on them and you are assured about the source of these pallets, you can
consider them safe to use. The term ‘national pallets’ means they can be used
for domestic transportation within the nation.
WHAT ARE INTERNATIONAL WOODEN PALLETS?
Wholesale timber pallets are used for
international projects and will have a stamp IPCC or International Plant
Protection Convention. There will be a code including the manufacturer’s
Country Code in two digits followed by the company’s registration code. Then, a
two-digit treatment code, like HT, KD, DB, or MB, will also be included.
WHAT ARE TWO DIGIT TREATMENT CODES ON THE PALLET COLLECTION?
HT
HT stands for Heat Treated, where timber pallets
are heat treated to disinfect them and remove parasites from the body. This
heat treatment ensures that these pallets are not harmful at all.
MB
MB stands for Methyl Bromide, and it means that
pallets are treated with toxic methyl bromide. If the pallets have this code,
they will not be used.
DB
DB stands for Debarked, meaning that the tree’s
bark was removed before the wood was derived for pallet manufacturing. They are
not harmful at all and can be used easily.
EPAL
European Pallets Association is another code
used in European countries, and the pallets are non-treated but safe for use as
well.
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