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A small Less-Than-Truckload (LTL) shipment that originates on a truck in Los Angeles and is moved to Phoenix where it is unloaded and put onto another truck for final shipment to Denver would be considered an intermodal shipment since it utilizes more than one vehicle during shipment. True/ False?

User Tomax
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2 Answers

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Answer:

False

Step-by-step explanation:

Intermodal shipping refers to shipping using two or more different types of freight modes, e.g. railway, truck, air, or sea.

In this case, the shipment is only moved by truck, one small and one large, but it doesn't involve any other type of freight mode. To consider it intermodal shipping it would have been necessary that a cargo train, sea or air transport be involved.

User Shuttsy
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5 votes

Answer:

False

Step-by-step explanation:

Intermodal transport can be defined as the transportation of goods in one and the same truck or loading medium without handling the goods themselves in a different transport modes.

Hence, It would not be considered as an intermodal shipment because it used more than one transport system.

User MattNewton
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