About five years ago, Philadelphia-based
Rohm and Haas Co.—an $8.9 billion
specialty materials company—decided
to take a serious look at blocking and
bracing programs being used in its North
American plants.
“At the time, everybody was sort of on their own to
do it the way that they had done it for however long,”
says Paul Little, logistics safety and trade compliance
director. “We saw problems here and there. They
would show up at the worst time in terms of getting
product out to our regions—Asia in particular. Drums
were damaged and couldn’t be sold.”
In conjunction with a contractor that does a lot of
work in the transportation logistics area, the company
underwent what Little characterizes as a “holistic”
review of its load-securing practices. More than 20
plants and warehouses were surveyed. The goal
was not necessarily to introduce new methods but
better standardize practices
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that would be compliant
with road, rail and ocean regulations and whatever
combination of these modes was necessary.
Plant shipping personnel were employing all sorts of systems—including wooden rail gates, load bars
and a product unfamiliar to Little at the time, known
as Ty-Gard. Ty-Gard is a laminated, high-strength,
pressure-sensitive acrylic adhesive restraint system
developed about 25 years ago by Walnut Industries,
Bensalem, Pa. (www.ty-gard.com).
How it Works
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| Ty-Gard secures loads in sea
containers without the need for lumber
or other bracing material. |
The Rohm and Haas plant based in Elma, Wash.,
was one of several that was a frequent user of Ty-Gard.
It had been using the product since 1999.
Installation of Ty-Gard takes about 15 to 20
minutes. According to Grant Miller, Elma’s plant
shipping manager, full loading requires about 45
minutes to an hour for two people working on a
40-foot sea container with 30-gallon drums of dry
sodium borohydride, the main product shipped out
of the facility. The chemical is sent in totes by truck to
Mexico or in sea containers by rail to the East Coast.
The resulting switch has saved the operation money
through reduced cargo damage and insurance
claims.
Lessons learned earlier in the field by various
company plants would soon become known to the
rest of the organization through Little’s “holistic”
review. “We set about to really understand how to use
all the different products properly, and that is when
we first got a hold of the Ty-Gard folks,” explains
Little. Trials and demonstrations of the system were
held at a public warehouse in Bensalem and at Rohm
and Haas’ Croyden, Pa., plant.
The end result was an instruction manual with
about 25 individual diagrams showing different
loading combinations with trucks and 20- and 40-foot
sea containers. “All the detail was there, so that our
loaders could understand what we were looking to
do,” says Little.
The switchover to Ty-Gard was not accomplished
without some initial skepticism, however. “These guys
typically have a lot of pride in how they secure the
load,” says Little. “They don’t want a release or spill on their watch. They looked at the
Ty-Gard, thinking, ‘I am used to
seeing 2x6s in there,’ so it took a
little convincing that this adhesive
material was in fact capable of
securing 40,000-pound loads.”
One reason for the adoption of Ty-Gard by some Rohm and Haas
plants was the implementation
of new ISPM requi rement s
requiring the use of treated wood
for bracing in sea containers.
Many countries will refuse cargo
if the wooden dunnage doesn’t have the heat-treated symbol.
The ergonomics and safety
issues involved with sawing and
hammering wood, along with
the wood’s premium price, all
combined to make the switch
to Ty-Gard a natural at some
locations for export shipments.
“If you happen to get caught
in an inspection, it will go more
quickly a lot of the time if the
inspector looks in the back and
sees no wood,” says Little.
One of the company’s key
warehouses in Louisville, Ky.,
added Ty-Gard to i t s loadsecuring
repertoire for shipping.
Little has learned that the easiest
way to introduce Ty-Gard is when
a plant has a problem with its
traditional methods. “Then, they
are a little more open to change,”
he says.
Little was impressed with the
training and support Ty-Gard
offered. “What is nice is that they
will do a live-load demonstration.
We have this product; it has
to go in that sea container
for a shipment on Thursday,
and they will work with us, as
opposed to playing around with
a demonstration loading that
we have to take back off the sea
container. So, it’s quite efficient
because we get the training, and
we get the loading and securing
all done at once,” he says.
“Your choices start to dwindle
when you get into the export
shipments, and that is where Ty-
Gard fills an important need,”
says Little. Ty-Gard meets the
requirements of the International
Maritime Dangerous Goods Code,
the Association of American
Railroads and the Bureau of
Explosives for the Safe Transport
of Hazardous Materials.
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