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Packing instructions

Unless your customer has specified packaging requirements, there are several national standards that can be used to select the appropriate packaging, marking, and preservation requirements for your products. Your procedures should make provision for the selection to be made by qualified personnel at the planning stage and for the requirements thus selected to be specified in the packing instructions to ensure their implementation. [Pg.481]

Packing instructions should not only provide for protecting the product but also for including any accompanying documentation, such as ... [Pg.482]

The packing instructions are likely to be one of the last instructions you provide and probably the last operation you will perform for a particular consignment. This also presents the last opportunity for you to make mistakes They may be your fast mistakes but they will be the first your customer sees. The error you made on component assembly probably won t be found, but the slightest error in the packaging, the marking, or the enclosures will almost certainly be found therefore this process needs careful control. It may not be considered so skilled a process but all the same it is vital to your image. [Pg.482]

Provide packing instructions for packing certain types of product. [Pg.488]

Finally, the construction should allow very flexible handling to cope with the various packing instructions recommended by the suppliers of the gel filtration medium. [Pg.62]

IATA, lNT A Dangerous Goods Regulations Handbook, ICAO Packing Instruction 623, Section (a) and (b), 2004. [Pg.50]

Individual product packing instructions contain more detailed information on packing Sephadex G-25. [Pg.67]

See individual product packing instructions for more detailed information on a specific medium. [Pg.76]

One complete set of the installation, operating, and maintenance instructions, shall be packed in the boxes or crates and shipped with the equipment. [Pg.315]

Changing the eluent in a ready-made column is sometimes combined with a loss of packing quality. The manufacturers try to hold the number of specified solvents for one packing type as low as possible, but some eluents have to be nominated at order time. Any replacement has to be performed strictly according to the instructions of the manufacturers. Not every eluent is suitable for the long-term storage of a used column (e.g., reactive decomposition products of tetrahydrofuran or corrosion by some aqueous buffers) and have to be replaced. [Pg.430]

Ensure that all paints, particularly two-pack, are thoroughly mixed in accordance with the manufacturer s instructions. [Pg.136]

This procedure provides detailed instructions on how to repack centrifugal pump packed stuffing boxes or glands. The methodology described here is applicable to other gland sealed units such as valves and reciprocating machinery. [Pg.947]

Some contractors do not leave behind the information packed with equipment they install. After all, they probably think, what use will the laboratory people have for installation instructions This material, often separate from use and maintenance instructions, will be very helpful down the line when repairs or modifications have to be made. The laboratory operator should collect all such information and file it away with care. He may never look at it again, but there could be a day when it will be urgently needed. [Pg.99]

Equipment instructions must be properly and promptly filed. A separate file should be set up for each piece of equipment and should include the smallest note packed with it. A lack of such files is an invitation to future problems. In one instance, a strip chart recorder that had not been used for several years seemed just right for a procedure but needed some minor repairs and parts. After a couple of hours of diligent search, the instruction book was finally found tucked away in a drawer. It could easily have been missed. In other less fortunate cases, it took time-consuming correspondence with the manufacturers to produce information that should have been immediately available in the file cabinet. [Pg.106]

Adequate pre-shop provision, thorough training, and strict oversight of the shoppers, as described above, were critical to the successful execution of the sample collection phase of the OPMBS. Each shopper received a kit containing sample labels and containers to hold the sampled commodities, ice packs and packaging materials, labels and boxes for use in shipping the collected commodities, written instructions, and forms well before the scheduled date of collection. The sample coordinator monitored sample collection and advised shoppers of actions to take when problems inevitably arose. [Pg.241]

Handling and packaging needs for batteries are different. Batteries need to be handled and packed to prevent short-circuits and minimize transportation costs. Again, a commercial company can provide appropriate packaging materials and instructions designed to minimize handling requirements and costs and eliminate possible liabilities associated with mispackaged materials. [Pg.1215]

These results suggest that the critical factor in the substrate-mediated intermolecular interactions which occur within the close-packed DHT layer is the inherent strong reactivity of the diphenolic moiety with the Pt surface. The interaction of adsorbates with each other through the mediation of the substrate is of fundamental importance in surface science. The theoretical treatment, however, involves complicated many-body potentials which are presently not well-understood (2.). It is instructive to view the present case of Pt-substrate-mediated DHT-DHT interactions in terms of mixed-valence metal complexes (2A) For example, in the binuclear mixed-valence complex, (NH3)5RU(11)-bpy-Ru(111) (NH 3)5 (where bpy is 4,4 -bipyridine), the two metal centers are still able to interact with each other via the delocalized electrons within the bpy ligand. The interaction between the Ru(II) and Ru(III) ions in this mixed-valence complex is therefore ligand-mediated. The Ru(II)-Ru(III) coupling can be written schematically as ... [Pg.539]


See other pages where Packing instructions is mentioned: [Pg.478]    [Pg.488]    [Pg.478]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.111]    [Pg.111]    [Pg.517]    [Pg.44]    [Pg.340]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.361]    [Pg.362]    [Pg.478]    [Pg.488]    [Pg.478]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.111]    [Pg.111]    [Pg.517]    [Pg.44]    [Pg.340]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.361]    [Pg.362]    [Pg.533]    [Pg.177]    [Pg.475]    [Pg.224]    [Pg.188]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.295]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.364]    [Pg.240]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.354]    [Pg.598]    [Pg.167]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.112]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.481 ]




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