ISO 668
ISO 668 – Series 1 freight containers – Classification, dimensions and ratings is an ISO international standard which nominally classifies intermodal freight shipping containers, and standardizes their sizes, measurements and weight specifications.
The current version of the standard is the Seventh edition, which integrates version E. The standard was prepared by Technical Committee ISO/TC 104: Freight containers, Subcommittee SC 1: General purpose containers.
Introduced in 1968, ISO 668 currently regulates both external and internal dimensions of containers, as well as the minimum door opening sizes, where applicable. Minimum internal dimensions were earlier defined by ISO standard 1894: General purpose series 1 freight containers – Minimum internal dimensions. Its second edition appeared in 1979, but was withdrawn, once revised by ISO 14961 of 1990. The current version of ISO 14961 is 2013, including Amendment 1 of 2016, last reviewed and reconfirmed in 2019.
ISO 668 also specifies the respective associated gross weight ratings, and includes requirements for load transfer areas in the base structures of containers, since Amendment 1 of 2005. Amendment 2 of 2005 then also standardized length containers.
The maximum gross mass rating of laden 20- and 30-foot length units was notably increased to by Amendment 1 of 2005. Until then, the MGM for 20- and 30-foot boxes was, and respectively.
However, since Amendment 2 of 2016, the maximum gross mass for ISO-standard containers of all sizes,, has until now been further increased to a maximum of. Draft Amendment 1 of ISO 668: 2020 – for the eighth edition – maintains this. This is remarkably heavy, given that U.S. trucks, including the weight of the truck itself, are federally limited to a max gross mass of – without special transport permits and regimes.
A separate standard is set for the required stacking strength, or 'maximum superimposed mass' for standard containers. The ISO standard for Series 1 containers, ISO 14961, established this, among other characteristics, for many years set at. However, in order to keep pace with the increase of container maximum gross weight, the continuing growth in container ship size, and the related height of container stacks on board the ships, the required stacking strength was increased to a superimposed weight of in 2005 per Amendment 3. This value was since maintained in the latest revision of Standard 14961. Production statistics show that the vast majority of containers have, for many years, been built with a stacking strength at or above the 213,000 kg figure stipulated in ISO 14961. In fact, most major container operators and lessors now cause containers to be built above the required figure, with the most common superimposed strength being.
Scope and systematic structure
The ISO 668 standard firstly classifies containers by their length in whole feet for their 'common names', despite all measurement units used being either metric or officially based on the metric system. The exact standard length of '30-foot' and shorter containers is actually slightly shorter than their nominal length, to accommodate for the space taken up by twist-lock couplers, required for stacking containers of unequal length.Stacking
ISO containers up to 40feet in length are only required to have the specified stacking strength at their four corners – typically achieved through four strong, vertical corner posts. Containers shorter than 40foot must therefore be horizontally joined together rigidly, to form a rigid combined whole of matching length to longer containers or another same-length joined container-combination, to be stackable – supported on the four outside corners of any resulting combination.ISO standard 668 hence defines the exact lengths of all standard container sizes on purpose in such a way that shorter containers, joined with the also standard sized twistlocks, can always form longer, combined units of an exact length, identical to that of longer containers, or other combinations, such that the corner castings will always line up on top of the four outside corners of another, longer container, or combination, for vertical connecting and securing.
However, this does not apply when stacking 40foot and 45foot containers in one stack. These can be stacked interchangeably. ISO standards require 45foot containers to include a second set of four strong vertical columns, manufactured in them, symmetrically at the 40foot length position, to support being stacked interchangeably with 40foot containers.