Overview #
Selecting the wrong chipboard grade is one of the most common — and most costly — mistakes we see in rigid box and folding carton briefs. A panel that’s 0.2mm too thin will flex under magnet pull, crack at the hinge crease, or fail drop testing before it ever reaches a retail shelf. This guide covers how we specify chipboard and greyboard grades across our rigid box, folding carton, and book-wrap packaging lines, with the exact caliper ranges, stiffness thresholds, and application logic our materials engineers use on every new project brief. Brand owners sourcing premium packaging for cosmetics, electronics, spirits, or gifting categories will find this particularly relevant — these are the segments where board grade decisions directly affect perceived quality and structural integrity.
Board Grade Classification: Caliper, Density & Stiffness Parameters #
When a new brief lands on our desk, the first three numbers we look at are caliper (mm), greyboard density (g/m²), and bending stiffness (mN·m). These three parameters together determine whether a board grade is appropriate for the application — caliper alone is not sufficient.
We work with greyboard in the following standard caliper bands: 1.0mm, 1.2mm, 1.5mm, 1.8mm, 2.0mm, 2.5mm, and 3.0mm. For rigid box lid and base panels, our standard specification is 2.0–2.5mm greyboard at a density of 1,150–1,250 g/m². Below 1.8mm, the lid panel flexes visibly under the pull of N35-grade neodymium magnets (the most common grade we embed), and the hinge crease — typically scored at 0.6–0.8mm depth — begins to crack after 40–60 open-close cycles in our durability testing. For book-wrap and clamshell formats, we step up to 2.5–3.0mm to maintain panel flatness across widths exceeding 250mm.
Bending stiffness is measured per ISO 2493-1 (four-point bending method). Our minimum acceptance threshold for rigid box panels is 800 mN·m in the machine direction. For folding carton applications — where the board must score, crease, and fold without fibre tear — we specify solid bleached sulphate (SBS) or folding boxboard (FBB) in the 270–400 gsm range, with a stiffness floor of 200 mN·m (cross-direction) per the same standard.
| Application | Board Type | Caliper Range | Density (g/m²) | Min. Stiffness (mN·m, MD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rigid box lid/base | Greyboard | 2.0–2.5mm | 1,150–1,250 | 800 |
| Book-wrap / clamshell | Greyboard | 2.5–3.0mm | 1,200–1,300 | 950 |
| Premium folding carton | SBS / FBB | 0.35–0.55mm (350–400 gsm) | 350–400 | 200 (CD) |
| Standard folding carton | Coated duplex | 0.40–0.60mm (350–450 gsm) | 350–450 | 180 (CD) |
| Lightweight insert tray | Greyboard | 1.0–1.5mm | 900–1,100 | 500 |
All incoming board stock is verified against GB/T 10335.4 (China national standard for greyboard) and cross-referenced against supplier mill certificates before it enters our cutting room.
Production Process: Cutting, Creasing & Quality Checkpoints #
Walking through our rigid box line during a factory audit, the first station you’d see is the guillotine and die-cutting room. Greyboard panels are cut to net size on our hydraulic guillotines with a positional tolerance of ±0.3mm — tighter than the ±0.5mm that most commodity box makers accept. This matters because a 0.5mm oversize panel on a 200mm-wide lid creates a visible gap at the corner joint after wrapping.
Creasing is done on our flatbed die-cutters using steel rule at a crease depth of 0.5–0.8mm depending on board caliper. For 2.0mm greyboard, we set crease depth at 0.6mm; for 2.5mm, we move to 0.75mm. Too shallow and the fold radius is too large, creating a rounded corner instead of a sharp 90° edge. Too deep and you sever the surface fibres, which telegraphs through the laminated wrap paper as a visible line — a defect we call “crease bleed.”
Our QC checkpoint at this station uses a calibrated digital caliper (resolution 0.01mm) to verify panel thickness on every new board lot — we pull 5 samples per 500-sheet stack. Thickness variation within a single lot must not exceed ±0.05mm; if it does, the lot is quarantined and returned to the supplier. We also run a moisture content check using a pin-type moisture meter: acceptable range is 6–9% MC. Board above 9% MC warps during lamination; below 6% it becomes brittle and cracks at the crease.
For folding carton lines, our sheet-fed offset presses run at 10,000–13,000 sheets/hour with inline register control. Our standard register tolerance on these lines is ±0.2mm — errors above 0.3mm are detectable by end consumers on fine-line or tight-trap designs and are flagged for rejection. Colour is managed to G7 Master calibration standards, with ΔE tolerances of ≤2.0 for brand spot colours verified against Pantone reference pulls.
Compliance, Sustainability & Certification Requirements #
For food-contact folding carton applications — snack boxes, tea packaging, confectionery cartons — board selection is governed by FDA 21 CFR 176.170 (components of paper and paperboard in contact with aqueous and fatty foods) for US-market brands, and EU Regulation 10/2011 for European buyers. We do not use recycled-content greyboard for direct food-contact applications; we specify virgin-fibre SBS or FBB with documented migration test results from the mill.
For brands with sustainability commitments, we source FSC-certified greyboard and SBS from audited mills. Our FSC Chain of Custody certificate (FSC-C[our cert number]) covers both rigid box and folding carton production. If your brand requires recycled-content board, we can specify post-consumer recycled (PCR) greyboard at 70–100% recycled fibre for non-food rigid box applications — this is common in our electronics and gifting category work. PCR greyboard typically runs 5–8% lower in stiffness versus virgin-fibre equivalents at the same caliper, which we compensate for by stepping up 0.2–0.3mm in thickness.
For export packaging subject to transport testing, we validate structural performance against ISTA 2A (packaged product up to 68 kg) or ASTM D4169 protocols depending on the destination market and retailer requirement. Our standard drop test height for retail gift boxes is 600mm onto a concrete surface — panels must show no delamination, corner split, or lid-fit failure after 3 drops.
Specification Notes for Brand Partners #
When you brief us on a rigid box or folding carton project, the three things we need immediately are: finished box dimensions (L × W × D in mm), the weight of the product going inside, and your target retail price point — because that last one tells us whether 2.0mm or 2.5mm greyboard is the right starting point before we even open a sample.
The most common mistake we see in briefs is specifying board grade by caliper alone without stating the application load. A 2.0mm greyboard that works perfectly for a 150g cosmetic jar insert will fail structurally under a 400g glass candle jar — the base panel deflects and the corner joints open. We always ask for product weight and fragility class before confirming the board spec.
Our typical process: digital structural dieline in 2–3 working days, physical unprinted greyboard sample (white-wrapped or kraft-wrapped) in 7–10 working days, printed and finished production sample in 15–18 working days after artwork approval. Production lead time after sample sign-off is 20–28 working days for rigid boxes and 15–20 working days for folding cartons, depending on order volume. Our standard MOQ for rigid boxes is 500 units per SKU; folding cartons start at 3,000 units.
Frequently Asked Questions #
Q1: What is the minimum greyboard caliper you recommend for a magnetic closure rigid box?
A: We specify a minimum of 2.0mm greyboard for magnetic closure lid and base panels. Below 1.8mm, the panel flexes under N35 neodymium magnet pull and the hinge crease typically cracks within 40–60 open-close cycles in our durability testing. For boxes wider than 200mm, we step up to 2.5mm as standard.
Q2: What are your MOQs and lead times for rigid box orders?
A: Our standard MOQ for rigid boxes is 500 units per SKU, with production lead time of 20–28 working days after sample approval. Physical unprinted samples are available in 7–10 working days. For folding cartons, MOQ starts at 3,000 units with a 15–20 working day production lead time.
Q3: Can you supply FSC-certified board for our sustainability requirements?
A: Yes — we hold FSC Chain of Custody certification covering both our rigid box and folding carton lines. We can source FSC-certified greyboard and SBS from audited mills. For recycled-content applications in non-food categories, we can specify PCR greyboard at 70–100% recycled fibre, though we compensate for the 5–8% stiffness reduction by stepping up 0.2–0.3mm in caliper.
Q4: What finishing options are compatible with 350–400 gsm SBS folding carton board?
A: SBS in the 350–400 gsm range is compatible with our full finishing range: gloss or matte aqueous coating, soft-touch lamination, UV spot varnish, hot foil stamping, and embossing. For embossing, we recommend a minimum board caliper of 0.45mm to achieve a clean relief depth of 0.3–0.5mm without fibre rupture on the reverse face.
Q5: What causes crease cracking on rigid box panels and how do you prevent it?
A: Crease cracking is almost always caused by one of two things: board moisture content below 6% MC (making fibres brittle) or crease depth set too deep for the board caliper. We check moisture on every incoming lot with a pin-type meter and hold the acceptable range at 6–9% MC. Crease depth is set at 0.6mm for 2.0mm greyboard and 0.75mm for 2.5mm — we verify this at the die-cutting station before any production run begins.
Planning a packaging project? Contact our team to request a complimentary specification review and sample quote.
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