Pack·ing, n.
1. The act or process of one who packs.
2. Any material used to pack, fill up, or make close. Specifically Mach.: A substance or piece used to make a joint impervious; as: (a) A thin layer, or sheet, of yielding or elastic material inserted between the surfaces of a flange joint. (b) The substance in a stuffing box, through which a piston rod slides. (c) A yielding ring, as of metal, which surrounds a piston and maintains a tight fit, as inside a cylinder, etc.
3. Masonry Same as Filling. [Rare in the U. S.]
4. A trick; collusion. [Obs.]
Cherd packing Bridge Building, the arrangement, side by side, of several parts, as bars, diagonals, a post, etc., on a pin at the bottom of a chord. --Waddell.
Packing box, a stuffing box. See under Stuffing.
Packing press, a powerful press for baling cotton, wool, hay, etc.
Packing ring. See Packing, 2 (c), and Illust. of Piston.
Packing sheet. (a) A large cloth for packing goods. (b) A sheet prepared for packing hydropathic patients.
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packing box
n 1: a small chamber in which packing is compressed around a
reciprocating shaft or piston to form a seal [syn: stuffing
box]
2: a large crate in which goods are packed for shipment or
storage [syn: packing case]