Most of what RDR sells is used and reconditioned — it’s usually the better value. But there are real situations where new is the right call. Here’s how to tell which one you’re in.
Fleet Consistency
If containers need to match — same dimensions, same finish, same wear state — across a large fleet, new units guarantee that from day one. Reconditioned inventory is functional and inspected, but individual units carry their own history and won’t be visually or dimensionally identical to each other the way a new production run is.
Custom Specifications
Used inventory is whatever is currently on the floor. If your application needs a specific size, configuration, or feature that doesn’t happen to be in current used stock, new is often the more direct path to exactly what you need rather than waiting on the right used unit to become available.
No Wear or Repair History
A reconditioned bin has been repaired and confirmed functional, but it has a history. For applications where that matters — food-adjacent handling, high-visibility environments, or equipment going into service alongside brand-new machinery — new avoids the question entirely.
The Tradeoff
New costs more than reconditioned, and lead time can be longer since it isn’t sitting on the lot the way used inventory often is. For most day-to-day material handling, a reconditioned unit does the same job for less. New makes sense specifically when consistency, custom specs, or a clean history matter more than cost.
See WIP Racking for Production Lines: What to Look For, or browse current New Bins/Baskets & WIP Racking inventory.
