Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ): 56
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Arlington, TX is a freight battlefield.
Right in the DFW engine room, where everything moves fast, gets handled more than you think, and gets treated like “one more pallet” the second it hits the carrier network. That’s great when your packaging is built like a tank.
It’s a nightmare when it isn’t.
Because in Arlington (and really all of DFW), freight lives in a world of terminals, cross-docks, stacked loads, tight delivery windows, and forklifts that don’t have time to be gentle. So if you’re shipping high-value equipment, assemblies, electrical enclosures, specialty components, or odd/heavy units out of Arlington, custom crating isn’t some nice-to-have.
It’s the difference between a smooth delivery and a phone call you don’t want.
So if you’re shipping anything valuable out of Arlington—equipment, fabricated assemblies, electrical panels, control enclosures, specialty components, odd-shaped or heavy units—custom crating is how you protect the product and protect the schedule.
Because DFW doesn’t “kind of” damage freight.
It either arrives right… or it turns into a mess.
Here’s the truth: the best shipment is boring. No damage photos. No claims. No replacement scramble. The receiving team opens the crate and the product is stable, clean, dry, and ready to use.
Custom crates make shipments boring—even in Arlington.
Why Arlington businesses choose custom crates
Most shipments that need custom crating fall into one (or more) of these buckets:
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High value (damage is expensive)
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Heavy (handling risk spikes fast)
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Odd-shaped (hard to stabilize on standard pallets)
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Sensitive (electronics, controls, coatings, precision surfaces)
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Time-critical (install windows don’t wait)
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Hard to replace (lead times are brutal)
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DFW handling intensity (more touches = more opportunities for problems)
If damage would cause chaos, custom crating is the move.
Case Study: “The DFW Terminal Tap”
This is a classic DFW story: the shipment doesn’t get destroyed… it gets nudged.
A company shipped a high-value unit out of Arlington on a pallet with straps and wrap. It looked secure. It passed the “quick glance” test.
Then it hit the DFW terminal network.
During transfer handling, the pallet got lifted from a slightly wrong angle. The base flexed. The unit shifted just a hair. And that’s all it takes—because vibration does the rest. Hours of micro-movement turns into loosened hardware, stressed contact points, and alignment issues.
It arrived looking fine on the outside.
But it wasn’t install-ready.
Now you’ve got:
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delays
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rework labor
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schedule chaos
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and a customer who doesn’t want your freight explanation—they want the unit working
Fix: custom crate with reinforced runners + true fork pockets + internal blocking/bracing so the unit couldn’t move even if the crate was handled aggressively.
Result: the next shipments arrived boring—open it, install it, done.
That’s custom crating in Arlington: it removes the DFW terminal tap from your life.
The difference between “a crate” and a custom crate
Not all crates protect.
Some are just boards nailed into a box. They look strong, but they ignore the real enemies: movement, vibration, forklift hits, humidity, compression, and weight distribution.
A real custom crate is engineered around:
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dimensions and weight (real load points, not just overall size)
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center of gravity (so it won’t tip or lean)
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forklift entry and clearance (2-way/4-way runners, reinforced base)
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internal blocking and bracing (so the product cannot shift)
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vibration resistance (micro-movement destroys freight quietly)
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shock protection (when the item is sensitive)
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moisture protection (humidity still matters)
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top-load strength (stacking/compression risk in LTL and warehousing)
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shipping method (LTL vs FTL vs flatbed vs container)
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destination requirements (including export compliance like ISPM-15 when required)
That’s what “custom” means: the crate is built for what your shipment will actually face.
What actually damages shipments leaving Arlington
Shipping damage isn’t mysterious. It’s predictable.
1) Vibration + micro-movement
Even if nothing drops, vibration works the load. Hardware loosens. Parts rub. Edges scuff. Sensitive components take small hits for hours. Outside looks fine. Inside tells the truth.
2) Forklift mishandling (DFW volume makes it worse)
Forks puncture bases. Loads get lifted from the wrong side. Crates get dragged or slammed. It’s not personal—it’s speed. And DFW runs on speed.
3) Compression / stacking pressure
LTL freight gets stacked and squeezed. If the crate isn’t rated for top-load strength, it flexes and transfers force into your product.
4) Moisture and staging exposure
Freight gets staged. It sits. It gets moved again. Moisture risk increases, especially when shipments wait for routing.
Custom crates are built to survive these realities.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
Who in Arlington typically orders custom crates?
Custom crating is common for businesses shipping:
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industrial equipment and machinery components
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fabricated assemblies and plant parts
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pumps, valves, actuators, fittings
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electrical panels and control enclosures
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high-value parts with tight tolerances
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job-site-critical equipment where delays cost money
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awkward loads that don’t secure well to standard pallets
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shipments that cannot show up “almost right”
The rule is simple: if replacement would cause chaos, you crate it properly.
The “cheap crate” trap (and why it’s expensive later)
A cheap crate feels like savings until it fails.
Then you pay the real bill:
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replacement product costs
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rework labor and overtime
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expedited freight
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job delays and downtime
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claims paperwork and disputes
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strained customer relationships
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lost repeat business
And carriers love to blame “insufficient packaging.”
Meaning: you pay for damage and you argue about it.
A properly built custom crate prevents the whole circus.
What Custom Packaging Products supplies for Arlington shipments
Custom Packaging Products provides custom crates designed for real-world freight—not best-case scenarios.
Typical process:
Step 1: Share shipment details
Dimensions, weight, fragility points, destination, shipping method.
Step 2: We match the crate to the real risk
Some loads need heavy blocking and bracing. Some need moisture barriers. Some need custom interior supports. Some need export compliance. The goal is correct protection—not underbuilt and not ridiculous overkill.
Step 3: We build the crate to protect the product
So the receiving team opens the crate and everything is stable, secure, and clean.
Step 4: You ship with confidence
No more praying. No more “hope it makes it.” Just predictable delivery.
MOQ + ordering notes (Arlington)
For custom crates, the Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ) is 56.
That’s ideal for Arlington companies with recurring outbound freight—multiple units, steady projects, consistent shipping.
And at that volume, freight strategy becomes a lever too.
Truckload savings: where smart buyers win
Most companies stare at crate cost and miss the bigger cost center:
Freight inefficiency.
When you plan toward truckload shipping, you can often reduce:
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per-unit freight cost
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handling touches (less handling = less damage risk)
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scheduling headaches
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LTL stacking/compression exposure
Truckload planning can turn packaging + freight into a cost advantage—especially in DFW where volume can work in your favor.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
When it’s time to stop guessing and crate it right
If any of these are true:
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you’ve had shipments arrive damaged before
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replacement lead time is brutal
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the customer expects perfection
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your shipment runs through terminal-heavy routing
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the freight is going LTL and gets handled too much
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the load is awkward, heavy, or sensitive to movement
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the item is expensive enough to ruin your week if it gets damaged
Then custom crating is the move.
Because the goal is simple:
Ship it once.
Deliver it right.
No DFW surprises.