Home » When 32 ECT Fails in Palletized Shipping
When 32 ECT Fails in Palletized Shipping
32 ECT is one of the most commonly used corrugated board grades.
It’s also one of the most misunderstood.
Many companies assume 32 ECT is “standard” and sufficient for most applications—but in palletized shipping, that assumption often leads to box failure, product damage, and hidden cost.
What 32 ECT Actually Means
ECT (Edge Crush Test) measures the stacking strength of corrugated board.
32 ECT indicates the board can withstand 32 pounds of force per inch of edge before crushing.
👉 It is a board-level measurement—not a full box performance guarantee
Why 32 ECT Works in Some Cases
32 ECT performs well when conditions are controlled:
- Lightweight products
- Limited stack height
- Short shipping cycles (e.g., parcel)
- Minimal storage time
👉 In these environments, 32 ECT is often cost-effective and sufficient
Where 32 ECT Starts to Fail
High Stack Loads
As pallet height increases, bottom boxes تحمل the full load.
- Increased compression leads to panel deformation and collapse
- Failure often starts at corners and edges
👉 32 ECT quickly reaches its limit under heavy stacking
Long-Term Storage
Time weakens corrugated under load.
- Boxes lose strength the longer they remain stacked
- Static load turns into gradual structural failure
👉 What holds for 1 day may fail over 2–3 weeks
Humidity Exposure
Moisture significantly reduces corrugated strength.
- Strength loss of 30–50% is common
- Warehouses and transit environments vary
👉 32 ECT becomes unreliable in uncontrolled conditions
Pallet Overhang & Misalignment
Real-world stacking is rarely perfect.
- Overhang weakens edge support
- Misalignment creates point loading
👉 These factors accelerate failure even at moderate loads
Dynamic Shipping Conditions
Movement introduces stress beyond static calculations.
- Vibration during transit
- Load shifting in LTL shipments
👉 Repeated stress reduces effective strength over time
How to Estimate When 32 ECT Is Not Enough
Instead of defaulting to 32 ECT, evaluate actual load conditions:
Step 1: Calculate Total Stack Weight
- Weight of all boxes above the bottom case
Step 2: Apply a Safety Factor
Typical range:
- 3x to 5x depending on conditions
Step 3: Compare to Box Compression Strength
If required strength exceeds estimated capacity:
👉 32 ECT is not sufficient for the application
Where Companies Get This Wrong
Treating 32 ECT as a Standard
- Using it across all SKUs regardless of load
- Not evaluating actual shipping conditions
Ignoring Environmental Factors
- No adjustment for humidity or storage time
- Assuming lab performance = real-world performance
Overcorrecting Too Late
- Increasing board grade only after failures occur
- Reacting instead of proactively designing
When to Upgrade Beyond 32 ECT
You should consider higher strength (e.g., 44 ECT or double wall) when:
- Products are heavy
- Pallets are stacked high or double-stacked
- Storage duration is extended
- Environment includes humidity exposure
- Shipping involves LTL or long transit cycles
When 32 ECT Is Still the Right Choice
32 ECT remains effective when:
- Loads are controlled
- Stack heights are limited
- Shipping cycles are short
- Products are relatively lightweight
👉 In these cases, higher board grade can be unnecessary cost
What This Means for Cost
32 ECT sits at the center of a common mistake:
- Too weak → damage, claims, product loss
- Too strong (overcorrected) → unnecessary material cost
👉 The goal is not to default to 32 ECT—it’s to match strength to actual conditions
Final Takeaway
32 ECT is not a universal standard—it is a specific solution for specific conditions. If you are not evaluating real load, storage, humidity, and shipping factors, you are either risking failure or overpaying to prevent it. Brown Packaging helps companies evaluate actual pallet loads, storage conditions, and transit demands to determine whether 32 ECT is sufficient or if a stronger corrugated solution is needed. The goal is not to default to 32 ECT or automatically upgrade beyond it—it is to match box strength to real-world conditions and total packaging cost.
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