Mixed-container planning depends on details for each model, not one blended quantity. This note is based on FCDC quotation, shipping and customs import pages.
Source basis: FCDC price quotation, shipping and customs import pages. This is an importer planning note, not a disclosed container shipment case.
Planning problem
First-time importers may want to test several categories in one order: dirt bikes, ATV products and utility vehicles. Without a clear list, the supplier cannot review pricing, packing or shipment questions accurately.
The buyer needs to separate quantity and configuration details for each product category.
FCDC material used
The quotation page asks for model, quantity, destination and shipping method. Shipping and customs pages add destination, delivery route and export document topics.
These materials provide the basis for a structured mixed-container inquiry.
Practical outcome
A mixed-container brief should include product category, target model, quantity, destination, shipping preference, packaging needs and spare parts questions.
FCDC can then discuss whether the order should stay mixed or be split into staged shipments.
Quote requirements
Model, quantity, destination and shipping preference are required for useful pricing.
Shipping method
Delivery method depends on destination and order details.
Customs documents
Review invoice, packing list and bill of lading topics.
Mixed-container checklist
- Product list by category.
- Quantity for each model.
- Destination country and port.
- Packaging or spare parts needs.
- Shipping and documentation questions.
Related FCDC resources
FAQ
Can first-time importers request mixed products?
They can ask, but the inquiry should list each category, quantity and destination so the supplier can review feasibility.
Prepare a mixed-container sourcing brief
Send the model list, quantity and destination so FCDC can review the mixed order path.