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V-board packaging is a type of edge protection (a “corner board”) used to reinforce and protect the corners of pallet loads from strapping, stretch wrap, and rough handling. It’s called V-board because instead of being a sharp 90° “L” corner, it’s shaped more like a V (often with a wider angle), so it can fit and protect different edge profiles and distribute pressure smoothly.
In plain English: it’s cornerboard/angleboard’s cousin — built to keep corners from getting crushed and straps from biting.
Now let’s break it down the way a shipper actually needs it explained.
What V-Board Is (And What It’s Not)
V-board is not a box.
It’s not a pallet.
It’s not a strap accessory “for looks.”
It’s a rigid protective board that goes on edges/corners so your load survives transit without getting chewed up.
You’ll see V-board used on:
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palletized cartons
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shrink-wrapped loads
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strapped loads
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stacks of cases that need to stay square
The point is to reinforce and protect edges.
Why Use V-Board Instead of Regular Cornerboard?
Regular cornerboard is typically an L-shape (90° angle). Perfect for square pallet loads.
V-board often has a more flexible angle profile — which can help when:
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the load edge isn’t perfectly square
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you want a more gradual pressure distribution
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you’re dealing with slightly rounded or non-uniform corners
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you’re protecting the edges of products that don’t like sharp pressure points
In practical terms: V-board can be great when you want edge protection that “fits” better or spreads force in a way that reduces denting.
What V-Board Does (The 4 Jobs)
1) Stops strapping from cutting into cartons
Straps concentrate force on corners. V-board spreads that force so cartons don’t crush.
2) Stops stretch wrap from crushing corners
Wrap tension can cave in the corners of tall pallets. V-board creates a stiff vertical edge.
3) Adds rigidity to tall pallet loads
It helps keep the stack square and reduces leaning/racking.
4) Protects edges from handling damage
Forklifts and dock bumps love corners. V-board takes the hit.
When You Should Use V-Board Packaging
Use V-board when any of these are true:
1) Your corners are getting crushed
If cartons arrive with crushed top corners or “caved edges,” you need edge reinforcement.
2) You’re shipping LTL or long-haul
More vibration + more transfers = more corner damage. V-board helps loads survive.
3) Straps are leaving marks or cutting into packaging
If straps are denting cases, V-board spreads pressure and protects surfaces.
4) You’re using tight stretch wrap
High wrap tension without edge protection is a corner-crush machine. V-board fixes that.
5) Product presentation matters
If your cartons need to look clean on arrival (retail, branded packaging), V-board keeps shipments looking professional.
Where V-Board Goes on a Pallet
Most commonly:
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placed on the vertical corners of the pallet load
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straps run over it
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stretch wrap runs around it
Depending on strapping pattern, you may use:
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2 corners (not ideal unless you’re doing a specific strap direction)
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4 corners (best practice for stability)
How to Choose V-Board (Fast)
You choose based on:
Length
Taller pallet = longer board.
Thickness / strength
Higher strap tension + heavier load = stronger board.
Leg/angle profile
You want it to sit flush and protect contact points.
Shipping environment
Rough shipping = go stronger/longer.
If you tell us:
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pallet height
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pallet weight
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shipping method (local/LTL/long-haul)
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whether damage is from strap or wrap
…we can recommend the right V-board spec quickly.
V-Board vs Angleboard vs Cornerboard (Quick)
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Cornerboard / Angleboard: usually L-shaped 90° edge protectors (most common)
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V-board: similar purpose, different angle profile (can fit non-square edges and distribute force differently)
All are edge protection tools — the “best” one depends on the load shape and how force is applied (strap/wrap/handling).
Bottom Line
V-board packaging is a V-shaped edge protector used on pallet corners/edges to prevent crushed corners, strap bite, and wrap damage. It reinforces loads, spreads pressure, and helps shipments arrive cleaner—especially for tall pallets, tight strapping, and rough shipping conditions.