Glossary

Shoring Bar

A shoring bar is an interior trailer bar used to help brace or hold freight in place.

Plain-English Meaning

Shoring bars work only when the trailer track, fittings, cargo face, and placement are suitable. They are often used with palletized freight but should not be treated as a wall.

The bar should contact freight or blocking in a way that resists the expected movement without crushing packaging. A bar placed too high, too low, or against weak freight can slip or leave the load unsupported.

Track condition matters. Damaged track, poor fitting engagement, or worn end hardware can turn a good-looking setup into a weak one.

In day-to-day freight work, the safest use of the term is narrow and factual. Confirm the current rule, equipment rating, shipment condition, and company procedure before using any glossary definition for a live securement decision.

Watchouts

  • Inspect track condition and fitting engagement.
  • Cargo can settle away from the bar.
  • Do not use a bar to hide a poor pallet pattern.

Related Terms

Primary Sources / References

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