5.2 Protective Packaging Selection
ESD-safe, cushioning, move and impact protection.
Packaging is the last engineering step, not gift wrap. It has two jobs: stop ESD (electrostatic discharge) from zapping electronics and cushion real-world drops so nothing dents or scuffs. The right choice depends on the journey—bench to test, van to site, or conveyors and pallets—not habit or whatever foam is nearby. A shielding bag acts like a tiny Faraday cage, while sized foam and solid cartons keep mass from meeting corners. Done well, accessories don’t wander, labels arrive readable, and boxes stack without crushing. A quick shake-and-drop check closes the loop, so the product that ships is the product that arrives.
5.2.1 The job (in one line)
Get each unit from your bench to the customer with zero zaps and zero dents—by pairing the right ESD barrier with the right cushion for the route it travels.
5.2.2 Pick by journey (not by habit)
5.2.3 ESD basics (what must touch what)
- Surface resistivity:
- Conductive < 10⁴ Ω/sq (trays, totes)
- Dissipative 10⁴–10¹¹ Ω/sq (bags, foams)
- Insulative > 10¹¹ Ω/sq (raw bubble/peanuts—avoid)
- Shielding bag ≠ pink bag: pink “anti-static” only reduces tribocharge; it does not shield. Finished PCBAs/boxes need a metal-in shielding bag (Faraday cage).
- Stack order (inside→out): product → dissipative layer (tray/foam) → shielding bag (closed) → cushion → carton.
- Ground path: totes/carts must bond to ESD floor; operators still strap until the bag is sealed.
5.2.4 Cushion material cheat sheet (choose by weight & fragility)
Rule of thumb: Fragile electronics behave like 15–50 g items (need gentle landings). Heavier, stiff boxes need thicker, stiffer blocks.
5.2.5 How much cushion? (fast sizing without a PhD)
- Know the drop: parcel sees ~0.75 m (30”) face/edge/corner; palletized sees lower drops but stack compression.
- Weight class:
- ≤ 2 kg → 20–30 mm foam each side
- 2–8 kg → 30–50 mm
- 8 kg → 50–75 mm + edge blocks
- Float the product: ≥ 25 mm clearance to every wall (≥ 50 mm if 8 kg+).
- Center of gravity: support heavy ends; add drop bridges so corners take the hit, not the bezel.
Need more rigor? Ask packaging to use cushion curves for your foam and target g-limit.
5.2.6 Unit pack architecture (what goes where)
Primary protection
- Shielding bag sealed (fold + label or zip).
- Connector caps, screw/vent plugs, dust film on windows if customer expects.
Secondary / dunnage
- Cradle or clamshell that controls orientation; no rubbing on labels or gaskets.
- Accessory bay (cables, PSU, manual) isolated so nothing presses the product.
Tertiary
- Corrugated carton (board grade matched to weight), edge blocks, top pad.
- Master carton for multiples: honeycomb divider or individual inners.
- Pallet: no overhang, corner boards, top cap, strap + stretch wrap with rope band at base.
5.2.7 Corrugated & cartons (don’t cheap out on paper)
- Board grade/ECT sized to weight + stack (double-wall for tall stacks or export).
- No overhang past pallet edges—corners crush first in transit.
- Orientation marks: UP arrows, CG label if needed; Do Not Stack cones if required by design.
5.2.8 Moisture, climate & clean looks
- Ocean/long humid routes: add desiccant + humidity card inside the carton (not bare on product).
- Hot/cold swings: avoid peanuts and thin bubbles—static and collapse.
- Retail finish: use film bags only over the shielding bag; keep fingerprints off before sealing.
5.2.9 Quick test plan (right-sized confidence)
- Fit check: shake test—no product rattle.
- Drop: 5–10 drops (faces/edges/corners) from route height; product and carton must pass cosmetics & function.
- Vibration: random vibe for route type; look for fretting or foam dusting.
- Compression/stack: simulate pallet stack time/weight; no wall bow, no crush into product.
- ESD: bag continuity/shield verification; tote resistivity spot-check.
(Your lab may quote ISTA/ASTM names later; the above is the spirit.)
5.2.10 Acceptance cues (fast eyes)
5.2.11 Common traps → smallest reliable fix
5.2.12 Pocket checklists
Designing the pack
- Journey picked (WIP / parcel / pallet); drop height known
- Shielding bag chosen; connectors capped; labels planned
- Foam type & thickness sized to weight and fragility
- Accessory bay defined; CG supported; ≥ 25 mm float all sides
- Carton board grade & master carton/pallet plan set
At the pack cell
- Gloves on; product bagged & sealed; labels correct
- Cradle/clamshell engaged; no rattle; accessory bay filled
- Carton square; edge blocks in; tape pattern complete
- Master carton & pallet: no overhang; wrap + strap + corners
- Ship labels & orientation marks applied; photos if customer wants
Audit (sample)
- One box drop-tested per lot; product passes cosmetic & function
- ESD spot-check on bags/totes; resistivity in range
- Pallet compression OK after 24 h; no wall bow