Incoterms, officially known as international commercial terms, are standardized terms that prevent confusion in trade and clarify the obligations of buyers and sellers' transactions. Examples of Incoterms for modes of transportation include Delivered at Terminal (DAT), Delivered Duty Paid (DDP), and Ex Works (EXW).
Lead time is the time it takes for the supplier company to have the product ready for delivery.
If there is a payment term you want, select it and enter the % for each.
You can enter Name of Mine, Location of Mine, License no., Production Tonnage, Loading rate, B/L & COA etc.
You can enter Maker, Compnay Credit, Lead time, Certificate, Test Reports, Spec Sheets, Warehouse and Manufactured Date.
You can enter Insepction, Size, Special Condition and Lead Time.
SHEX (Sunday and Holidays Exempted) refers to a method of handling Sundays and holidays in the contractual arrangement (WWD) that is included in the days of good weather for loading and unloading. For example, if you add "WWD SHEX", it means that even if you worked on Sundays and holidays, you will not calculate during the berth period, and vice versa, you can add "WWD SHEXUU". "UU" here means "Unless Used."
SHEXEIU (sundays and holidays excluded/excluded even if used) means that even if you work on Sundays and holidays, it is not calculated during the berth period.
SHEXUU (Sundays and Holidays Exception Unless Used) refers to the method of being inserted during the anchorage period when unloading is carried out on Sundays and holidays.
SHINC stands for Sundays and Holidays Included and is a method that shipowners use to calculate the total laytime of a vessel in a port. This means that laytime includes Sundays and public holidays.