Source: https://www.labelmaster.com/un-number/un-1267
Timestamp: 2019-04-18 10:53:43+00:00

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Open Placard Finder and search for placards for other UN Numbers.
The skull and crossbones placard with red border on white background can be used as a sour crude oil hazard marking in accordance with 49 CFR 172.502(b)(2).
Any liquid meeting one of the definitions specified in 49CFR 173.115.
Any mixture having one or more components with a flash point of 60.5°C (141°F) or higher, that make up at least 99 percent of the total volume of the mixture, if the mixture is not offered for transportation or transported at or above its flash point.
Any liquid with a flash point greater than 35°C (95°F) which does not sustain combustion according to ASTM 4206 or the procedure in Appendix H of this part.
Any liquid with a flash point greater than 35°C (95°F) and with a fire point greater than 100°C (212°F) according to ISO 2592.
Any liquid with a flash point greater than 35°C (95°F) which is in a water-miscible solution with a water content of more than 90 percent by mass.
Open Hazmat Label Finder and Shipping Name Finder and search for hazmat labels for other UN Numbers.
The skull and crossbones label with red border on white background can be used as a sour crude oil hazard marking in accordance with 49 CFR 172.327(b).
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Date created: August 31, 2017.
Click the Guide Icon to open the Emergency Response Guidebook Guide 128 PDF.
Except for size and color the FLAMMABLE LIQUID label must be as follows: See Illustration. In addition to complying with § 172.407, the background color on the FLAMMABLE LIQUID label must be red.
§ 172.542 FLAMMABLE Placard: For the difference between flammable and combustible materials, see § 173.120. Except for size and color, the FLAMMABLE placard must be as follows: In addition to complying with § 172.519, the background color on the FLAMMABLE placard must be red. The symbol, text, class number and inner border bust be white. The word "GASOLINE" may be used in place of the word "FLAMMABLE" on a placard that is displayed on a cargo tank or a portable tank used to transport gasoline by highway. The word "GASOLINE" must be shown in white.
Hazard identification numbers, utilized under European and some South American regulations, may be found in the top half of an orange panel on some intermodal bulk containers. The United Nations 4-digit identification number is in the bottom half of the orange panel.
NOTE: The risk of spontaneous violent reaction within the meaning of digit 9 includes the possibility, due to the nature of a substance, of a risk of explosion, disintegration and polymerization reaction followed by the release of considerable heat or flammable and/or toxic gases.
Doubling of a digit indicates an intensification of that particular hazard (i.e., 33, 66, 88).
Where the hazard associated with a substance can be adequately indicated by a single digit, the digit is followed by a zero (i.e., 30, 40, 50).
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Packing Group I indicates great danger.
Packing Group II indicates medium danger.
Packing Group III indicates minor danger.
These provisions are multi-modal and apply to bulk and non-bulk packagings. If transported as a residue in an underground storage tank (UST), as defined in 40 CFR § 280.12, that has been cleaned and purged or rendered inert according to the American Petroleum Institute (API) Standard 1604 (IBR, see § 171.7 of this subchapter), Then the tank and this material are not subject to any other requirements of this subchapter. However, sediments remaining in the tank that meet the definition for a hazardous material are subject to the applicable regulations of this subchapter.
These provisions are multi-modal and apply to bulk and non-bulk packagings. A bulk packaging that emits hydrogen sulfide in sufficient concentration that vapors evolved from the crude oil can present an inhalation hazard must be marked as specified in §172.327 of this part.
If the material has a flash point at or above 38°C (100°F) and below 93°C (200°F), then the bulk packaging requirements of § 173.241 of this subchapter are applicable. If the material has a flash point of less than 38°C (100°F), then the bulk packaging requirements of § 173.242 of this subchapter are applicable.
Metal (31A, 31B, and 31N); Rigid plastics (31H1 and 31H2); Composite (31HZ1). Additional Requirement: Only liquids with a vapor pressure less than or equal to 110 KPs at 50°C (1.1 bar at 122°F), or 130 kPa at 55°C (1.3 bar at 131°F) are authorized.
Metal (31A, 31B and 31N); Rigid plastics (31H1 and 31H2); Composite (31HZ1 and 31HA2, 31HB2, 31HN2, 31HD2 and 31HH2). Additional Requirement: Only liquids with a vapor pressure less than or equal to 110 kPa at 50°C (1.1 bar at 122°F), or 130 kPa at 55°C (1.3 bar at 131°F) are authorized, except for UN2672 (also see Special Provision IP8 for UN2672).
The maximum degree of filling must not exceed the degree of filling determined by the following: Degree of filling = 97/(1+a(tr-tf)). Where: tr is the maximum mean bulk temperature during transport, and tf is the temperature in degrees celsius of the liquid during filling.
A portable tank having a minimum test pressure of 1.5 bar (150 kPa) may be used when the flash point of the hazardous material transported is greater than 0°C (32°F).
Determine whether a hazardous class loading, transport or storage with other hazard classes is allowed, is not permitted, or is restricted using the hazardous materials segregation table.
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(1) The absence of any hazard class or division or a blank space in the table indicates that no restrictions apply.
(2) The letter “X” in the table indicates that these materials may not be loaded, transported, or stored together in the same transport vehicle or storage facility during the course of transportation.
(3) The letter “O” in the table indicates that these materials may not be loaded, transported, or stored together in the same transport vehicle or storage facility during the course of transportation unless separated in a manner that, in the event of leakage from packages under conditions normally incident to transportation, commingling of hazardous materials would not occur. Notwithstanding the methods of separation employed, Class 8 (corrosive) liquids may not be loaded above or adjacent to Class 4 (flammable) or Class 5 (oxidizing) materials; except that shippers may load truckload shipments of such materials together when it is known that the mixture of contents would not cause a fire or a dangerous evolution of heat or gas.
(4) The “*” in the table indicates that segregation among different Class 1 (explosive) materials is governed by the compatibility table in paragraph (f) of this section.
(5) The note “A” in the second column of the table means that, notwithstanding the requirements of the letter “X”, ammonium nitrate (UN1942) and ammonium nitrate fertilizer may be loaded or stored with Division 1.1 (explosive) or Division 1.5 materials, unless otherwise prohibited by §177.835(c).
(6) When the §172.101 table or §172.402 of this subchapter requires a package to bear a subsidiary hazard label, segregation appropriate to the subsidiary hazard must be applied when that segregation is more restrictive than that required by the primary hazard. However, hazardous materials of the same class may be stowed together without regard to segregation required for any secondary hazard if the materials are not capable of reacting dangerously with each other and causing combustion or dangerous evolution of heat, evolution of flammable, poisonous, or asphyxiant gases, or formation of corrosive or unstable materials.
See an excerpt of 49 CFR § 177.848 Segregation of hazardous materials.

References: § 172

§ 172
 § 173
 § 172
 § 280
 § 171
 §172
 § 173
 § 173
 §177
 §172
 §172
 § 177