enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Breakbulk cargo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breakbulk_cargo

    In shipping, break-bulk, breakbulk, [2] or break bulk cargo, also called general cargo, are goods that are stowed on board ships in individually counted units. Traditionally, the large numbers of items are recorded on distinct bills of lading that list them by different commodities . [ 3 ]

  3. List of cargo types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cargo_types

    The term break bulk derives from the phrase breaking bulk—the extraction of a portion of the cargo of a ship or the beginning of the unloading process from the ship's holds. These goods may not be in shipping containers. Break bulk cargo is transported in bags, boxes, crates, drums, or barrels.

  4. Distribution center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distribution_center

    Items shipped by break-bulk are usually stored in pick, which are usually the bottom two pick-faces of warehouse racking. A pick-face is the space on such a racking system onto which a pallet can be loaded. Export: An export department controls orders which are leaving the country of the distribution center. This department is almost identical ...

  5. What Is Breakbulk? - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/breakbulk-135611780.html

    The definition of "breakbulk" forever changed on April 26, 1956, when Malcom McLean's SS Ideal-X, the first commercial container ship, was loaded in Newark, New Jersey, and set sail for Houston.

  6. Bulk cargo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulk_cargo

    Smaller quantities can be boxed (or drummed) and palletised; cargo packaged in this manner is referred to as breakbulk cargo. [2] Bulk cargo is classified as wet or dry. [2] The Baltic Exchange is based in London and provides a range of indices benchmarking the cost of moving bulk commodities, dry and wet, along popular routes around the seas ...

  7. Neo-bulk cargo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neo-bulk_cargo

    In 2000, the largest neo-bulk car carrier company in the world was Wallenius Wilhelmsen, with a fleet of 20 carrier vessels, and a total haulage that year of 1.5 million vehicles. [6] Other special designs of neo-bulk carriers include log-carriers that are designed to tip their load over the side of the vessel into the water, relying upon the ...

  8. Breaking bulk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breaking_bulk

    Break bulk or breaking bulk may refer to: Breakbulk cargo , a shipping term for any loose material that must be loaded individually, and not in Intermodal containers nor in bulk as with oil or grain Breaking bulk (law) , a legal term for taking anything out of a package or parcel or in any way destroying its entirety

  9. Stowage plan for container ships - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stowage_plan_for_container...

    As stowage plans are transmitted electronically as data files between ships and terminals, they can be intercepted by modern pirates working with organized crime syndicates. These attacks are called Major Criminal Hijacks (MCH) or South China Sea Piracy; pirates board the ship with good knowledge of its layout and where the most coveted cargo ...