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Cross Contamination
Range of Risk
Some products may contaminate other products. The
seriousness may range from tainting through to health and safety threatening
contamination.
Examples
An example of tainting is where a product giving off a
pungent aroma may transfer some of this aroma onto another product. For
instance, it would be bad practice to have perfumes loaded near to fresh apples.
An example of health and safety threatening contamination is where two chemicals that are prone to evaporation and that may be harmless individually, may result in a poisonous or potentially explosive atmosphere when their vapors are mixed.
Technical Information
Those responsible for planning
vehicle loading will be
given (or will acquire) technical information on which products should be
separated, and the level and nature of the product separation.
Types of Separation
Products may be separated in a number of ways, such as:
Tolerances
Information should also be available about any tolerances
that should be observed. Some products may need to be separated as an ideal
requirement. This may be because the consequences of contamination are
insignificant and have no effect on health and safety. For other products there
may be a strict stipulation that they must be separated. This may be because
contamination is likely and/or that contamination may result in a significant
degradation of the product or that health and safety may be compromised
Efficient Vehicle Filling | Load Height | Load Stability and Weight Distribution | Loading Order | Temperature Control | Cross Contamination | Un/Loading Equipment
Fuel Efficiency | Vehicle Loading | Monitoring Performance
Planning | Types of Distribution | Legal Requirements in Commercial Transport
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