Direct answer
The practical answer depends on the intended use and the specification agreed before production. For corner protection, buyers should define what must be measured, approved, documented, and checked again before shipment. In our experience, the strongest control is a clear reference package: drawing revision, approved sample where relevant, acceptance criteria, inspection photos, and packing instructions. This makes corner protection easier to communicate across purchasing, factory, quality, and installation teams. A common mistake is treating corner protection as a supplier-only decision. The buyer, installer, maintenance team, and receiving warehouse may each own part of the outcome. Assign those responsibilities before releasing the order. For repeat orders, retain the final specification and record any approved change. Small undocumented changes in material, machining, finish, labeling, or packing can create larger differences when the next batch arrives.
Practical buyer notes
A weak specification often uses broad phrases such as premium quality or standard packing. Replace them with photos, tolerances, named materials, label positions, and inspection records.
One common mistake we see with corner protection is approving appearance without approving use conditions. A surface intended for a restaurant, rental property, or premium island needs a different maintenance and repair conversation.
For a design brand protecting a premium finish standard, this part of the corner protection decision should center on flatness checks and support requirements before the order is approved.
One common mistake we see with corner protection is approving appearance without approving use conditions. A surface intended for a restaurant, rental property, or premium island needs a different maintenance and repair conversation.
Victor Wood Furniture