Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ): 56
đźšš Save BIG on Truckload orders!

If you’re searching for Foundry Custom Crates, you’re not shopping for “packaging.”

You’re shopping for damage prevention.

Because foundry freight isn’t cute. It’s not candles and throw pillows. It’s heavy, awkward, sharp-edged, oil-stained, and usually worth way too much money to let some half-baked crate job gamble with it.

Foundry shipments get wrecked for the same reason every time: the load is brutal… and the packaging is soft.

This page is here to fix that.

No fluff. No “we value quality and customer satisfaction” nonsense. Just the real-world stuff buyers and shipping managers actually care about:

What Counts as “Foundry Freight” (And Why It’s Different)

A lot of industries ship heavy stuff.

Foundries ship heavy stuff that fights back.

Foundry shipments tend to have one or more of these problems:

And here’s the kicker:

Even if your casting itself is “tough,” the reality is the freight environment is tougher.

Forklifts, terminals, ramps, tight trailers, sudden braking, stacking pressure, and people who do not care about your product as much as you do.

So your crate has to do two jobs:

  1. Protect the product

  2. Protect the shipment from the shipping process

The Ugly Truth: Most Foundry Damage Happens From 3 Things

If we’re keeping it real, foundry freight gets damaged because of:

1) Shifting

This is the silent killer.

The load moves two inches… then becomes a battering ram inside the packaging.

Once it starts moving, it doesn’t stop moving until something breaks.

2) Forklift hits / punctures

Forks through the wall.
Forks under the wrong spot.
Forks straight into the product.
Forks that “tap” the crate and crack something inside.

3) Crushing and stacking pressure

If your crate isn’t built to resist vertical load and side pressure, you’ll see:

That’s why “just throw it on a pallet and wrap it” works… until it doesn’t.

And in foundry, that “until it doesn’t” usually costs you more than doing it right the first time.

What a Foundry Custom Crate Actually Is

Let’s define it in plain English:

A foundry custom crate is a crate built around your specific load so it can be shipped without:

It’s not “wood around a thing.”

It’s a controlled shipping system:

Foundry crates are about control.

Control the weight.
Control the movement.
Control the handling.
Control the risk.

Crate vs Skid vs Pallet: What Do You Really Need?

A lot of buyers don’t actually need a full crate every time.

But they do need the correct solution for the load.

Here’s the quick breakdown:

Pallet (lowest protection)

Best for:

Foundry note: pallets alone usually fail when parts are heavy, sharp, or unbalanced.

Skid (most common for heavy foundry parts)

Best for:

A skid is a stronger base than a pallet, designed to handle serious weight.

Crate (best protection)

Best for:

If you’ve had claims, re-shipments, or angry customers… you’re already in crate territory.

The Foundry Shipping Environment: Why LTL Is a Warzone

If you ship LTL (less-than-truckload), your freight is basically joining a fight club.

It gets moved more.
Handled more.
Stacked more.
Transloaded more.

That’s not a guess. That’s just how it works.

More touches = more chances for damage.

If your foundry shipments go LTL, a custom crate becomes less of a “nice-to-have” and more like a smart decision that prevents repeat pain.

And if you’re exporting, or shipping long distance, or sending to a jobsite that’s chaos? Same thing.

The #1 Rule of Foundry Crating: Stop Movement Inside the Package

Let’s hammer this home:

If the part can move, the part will move.

And when a 300 lb casting moves, it doesn’t “shift politely.”

It slams.

So proper foundry crates often include some version of:

This is the difference between:

Why Sharp Edges Destroy Bad Packaging (And How We Fix It)

Foundry parts love sharp edges.

Sharp edges cut:

So a real foundry shipping setup often needs:

If you’ve ever received a shipment where the casting “ate” the crate from the inside out, you know exactly what that means.

“Custom” Doesn’t Mean Complicated (When the Supplier Knows What They’re Doing)

Buyers usually hesitate because they assume:

But custom crates can be simple and fast when the process is dialed in.

We quote based on the stuff that matters:

And we build the crate to match the real world:

Not fantasy.

Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!

Foundry Crates for Castings: What Matters Most

If you’re shipping castings, the biggest variables are:

Weight distribution

A casting can look “balanced” but still be top heavy or offset.

A crate/skid has to support the load where the load is actually strong and stable.

Support points

Some castings have delicate machined surfaces or critical faces.

You don’t want the load resting on something that matters.

Correct blocking keeps pressure off the wrong areas.

Tip risk

Tall or narrow loads tip.

Crates can be built to widen the footprint and stabilize the center of gravity.

Handling method

If the receiver uses a forklift, we build accordingly.
If the receiver uses a crane, that changes things.
If it’s going to a job site, that changes things too.

Foundry Crates for Machined Parts: Protect the “Finished Work”

Machined parts are where money gets wasted fast.

A raw casting might take a beating and still be “fine.”

But machining is precision work. One ding on a critical surface can turn the part into scrap.

So if you’re shipping machined parts, crates often need:

Because vibration over a long haul can do damage too—especially when parts rub against bracing or each other.

Mixed Loads: The Hidden Killer

Foundries often ship mixed loads:

Mixed loads are tricky because the heaviest part always wants to become the bully.

So a mixed-load crate needs internal zoning:

If you’ve ever opened a shipment and found parts “reorganized” inside the packaging… that’s a mixed-load failure.

Export and Long-Haul: Why Overbuilding Sometimes Saves You Money

Long-haul and export introduce more risk:

In these cases, slightly stronger packaging can be cheaper than:

Foundry shipments don’t fail because they were 2% too strong.
They fail because they were 40% too weak.

What We Need From You to Quote Foundry Custom Crates Fast

If you want this moving quickly, here’s the info that makes quotes painless:

  1. What are you shipping? (casting, machined part, assembly, etc.)

  2. Dimensions (L x W x H)

  3. Weight (per unit)

  4. Quantity (how many crates?)

  5. Shipping method (LTL or FTL)

  6. Origin zip + destination zip

  7. Timeline (when do you need it?)

  8. Special concerns (machined surfaces, coatings, fragile components)

If you don’t know everything, no problem. Start with what you have.

The “Forklift Reality” Checklist (So Your Crate Doesn’t Get Speared)

Here’s what causes forklift disasters:

A good foundry crate includes:

A crate is only as good as how it gets handled.

“Do Not Stack” vs “Stackable”: Don’t Guess

Stacking is a big deal in freight.

Some crates can be built stackable.
Some should never be stacked.

If you guess wrong, you get:

A proper crate matches stacking expectations. If it must be non-stack, the structure and markings should reflect that.

Repeat Shipments: How to Stop Bleeding Money Every Month

If you ship similar loads repeatedly, there are two paths:

  1. Keep reinventing the wheel (and keep eating damage costs)

  2. Standardize a crate design that works

Standardized crate designs help:

Foundry operations love standardization because everything is already hard enough.

A Simple Way to Think About Foundry Crate “Strength Levels”

Instead of overcomplicating it, think in levels:

Level 1: Basic crate

Level 2: Reinforced crate (most common)

Level 3: Heavy-duty / high-risk crate

If you’re shipping foundry freight, Level 2 is the usual “smart choice.”
Level 3 is for “this cannot go wrong.”

Why Foundry Buyers Choose CPP for Custom Crates

Because buyers don’t want a lecture.

They want:

We’re built for that.

You tell us what you’re shipping.
We build the solution that keeps it safe.
And we keep it moving.

What You Can Expect When You Request a Quote

You can expect:

You should not expect:

Foundry freight punishes guesses.

The Bottom Line

Foundry custom crates exist for one reason:

To make sure the expensive, heavy, awkward thing you worked hard to produce arrives exactly how it left.

No damage.
No surprises.
No “we’ll file a claim.”
No rework.
No customer drama.

If you’re done rolling the dice with freight, this is the move.

Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!