dry van reefer
Steel Beams
Steel beams can slide, flex, damage straps, and concentrate force on dunnage. Use verified rules, carrier policy, and manufacturer ratings before loading.
Quick Answer
Steel beams can slide, flex, damage straps, and concentrate force on dunnage. Use verified rules, carrier policy, and manufacturer ratings before loading.
Steel is rigid, but the load can still move
Steel beams can slide as a bundle, shift on dunnage, or cut into webbing at flanges and corners. The load may look square while the contact points are doing the real work.
This page uses general securement principles and avoids stating a beam-specific federal requirement.
Driver review notes
Check whether dunnage supports the beam stack evenly, whether bands or blocking keep pieces together, and whether chains or straps contact sharp flanges.
If beam length, weight, or bundle count differs from paperwork, review the securement plan before movement.
Source notes
No exact federal commodity section is mapped for this page, so it stays noindex as a general guide.
Checklist
- Check bundle integrity and sharp edges.
- Use suitable dunnage and securement device protection.
- Avoid hard rule statements without a verified source.
Practical Notes
Treat this page as a planning reference. Verify the current regulation, carrier policy, shipper instructions, manufacturer ratings, and equipment condition before a truck moves.
Primary Sources / References
Last reviewed:
- FMCSA CSA Cargo Securement Overview Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration CSA Safety Planner · official · reliability: high
- CargoSecurement.com Editorial Policy CargoSecurement.com · internal · reliability: medium