6mm Plywood — Sheets Per Container (40HC)
A standard 40-foot High Cube container can hold approximately 2,656 sheets of 6mm plywood with Acacia hardwood core (580 kg/m³ density), loaded on 16 pallets at 166 sheets per pallet. Net weight is 27.51 MT. The loading is weight-limited. Standard panel size: 1220×2440mm (4'×8').
6mm Plywood — 40ft High Cube Loading Table
Panel size: 1220×2440mm (4'×8'). 40ft High Cube, max payload 28.5 MT, up to 18 pallets.
| Core Material | Density | Sheets/Pallet | Pallets | Total Sheets | Net Weight (MT) | CBM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Styrax | 500 kg/m³ | 166 | 18 | 2,988 | 26.68 | 53.37 |
| Acacia | 580 kg/m³ | 166 | 16 | 2,656 | 27.51 | 47.44 |
| Eucalyptus | 650 kg/m³ | 158 | 15 | 2,370 | 27.51 | 42.33 |
| Pine | 520 kg/m³ | 166 | 17 | 2,822 | 26.21 | 50.40 |
| Rubberwood | 680 kg/m³ | 156 | 15 | 2,340 | 28.42 | 41.79 |
| Styrax + Acacia | 540 kg/m³ | 166 | 17 | 2,822 | 27.22 | 50.40 |
| Styrax + Eucalyptus | 575 kg/m³ | 166 | 16 | 2,656 | 27.28 | 47.44 |
| Acacia + Eucalyptus | 615 kg/m³ | 161 | 16 | 2,576 | 28.30 | 46.01 |
Need Custom Calculations?
Try our interactive Container Packing Calculator with custom dimensions, thickness, and wood species.
Open Container Packing Calculator →Frequently Asked Questions
▶How many sheets of 6mm plywood fit in a 40HC container?
With Acacia core (580 kg/m³), approximately 2,656 sheets of 6mm (1/4") plywood fit in a 40ft High Cube container. With lighter Styrax core (500 kg/m³), you can fit 2,988 sheets. Panel size: 1220×2440mm (4'×8').
▶What is the weight of a full container of 6mm plywood?
A full 40HC container of 6mm plywood weighs approximately 27.51 metric tons (net) with Acacia core. The maximum payload capacity of a 40HC is 28.5 MT.
▶How many pallets of 6mm plywood fit in a 40HC?
Depending on core material, 18–16 pallets of 6mm plywood fit in a 40HC container. Each pallet contains 166 sheets stacked to a maximum height of ~900mm.
▶Is 6mm plywood loading weight-limited or space-limited?
6mm plywood with Acacia core is weight-limited. The container reaches its weight limit before running out of space.
