A 40' NOR container (Not 40' NOR H.C.) has a capacity of 57.8 CBM.
68 CBM
40' NON-OPERATIONAL REFRIGERATED CONTAINER
24
40 RF = 40 foot reefer (standard) 40 RF = 40 foot high cube container (usually 30 cms higher)
Assuming you mean sucrose and a 40 (US) foot by 40 by 40 cubic container: We have: Sucrose density : 1.5879 g·cm-3 Or 1.5879 ton / m^3 1 US foot = 0.30480 m So the container is ( 40 * 0.3048m) ^3 = 1812.28 m^3 And it can contain : 1812.28 m^3 * 1.5789 ton/m^3 = 2877.717 tons
A ton is a unit of mass. A foot is a unit of distance. The two units are therefore incompatible. A container would never be measured in feet, as a foot is a unit of length, not of volume.
40 x 8.5 = 2800lbs on average 40 x 9.5 = 3900lbs on average
40' HQ container total cbm is 68
40' HQ is 68 cbm
54 - 56 cbm
56 CBM
Mathematically it is close to 77 CBM. But in international business it is generally accepted to consider 68-70 CBM for 40 ft HQ containers.
65
in theory it is 76.3CBM, however, in reality since your cargo can't fill in all the space it is closer to 67-70 CBM
if container is palltized 36.2 is the full CBM.if its not palletized it depends upon the item.length*width*height*total number of cartoons came from the comntainer.
in theory it is 76.3CBM, however, in reality since your cargo can't fill in all the space it is closer to 67-70 CBM
56
40
Container 40' standard Container 40' palletwide 2.5m Container 45' standard Container 45' palletwide 2.5m 25 pallets 30 pallets 27 pallets 33 pallets