Dewayne, We did a job a few years ago for a landscape block manufacturer. They used a solid plastic skid/tray/pallet, call it what you want, it was 4 inches this, and solid plastic. They stacked these in an accumulation area and recycled them back thru the automated process. The accumulation area needed protection for solid unit load of Group A plastics. Along these lines I am sure you can use your imagination and come up with some others, such as plastic/plexiglass sheets stacked solid just like drywall, or similar arrangements. Each situation would need to be evaluated to come to an agreement whether the storage configuration was a solid unit load. just my 2 cents.. Jeff Hewitt, PE, SET, SFPE (Professional Member) Corporate Engineer Bi-State Fire Protection Corporation St. Charles, MO 63301 636-946-0011 636-946-5172 (fax)
--- On Tue, 12/23/08, Dewayne Martinez <[email protected]> wrote: From: Dewayne Martinez <[email protected]> Subject: solid unit load examples To: [email protected] Date: Tuesday, December 23, 2008, 11:05 AM Could I please get some examples of a solid unit load of nonexpanded plastics? I am having trouble picturing a load that does not have any voids (air) within the load. Thanks, Dewayne _______________________________________________ Sprinklerforum mailing list http://lists.firesprinkler.org/mailman/listinfo/sprinklerforum For Technical Assistance, send an email to: [email protected] To Unsubscribe, send an email to:[email protected] (Put the word unsubscribe in the subject field) _______________________________________________ Sprinklerforum mailing list http://lists.firesprinkler.org/mailman/listinfo/sprinklerforum For Technical Assistance, send an email to: [email protected] To Unsubscribe, send an email to:[email protected] (Put the word unsubscribe in the subject field)
