VolumTransport Tutorial
This is the tutorial for the VolumTransport application.
Its goal is to help you understand how the app works, when it makes sense to use it, and what you can realistically expect from it.
It is intended for users who have already reached the app and want to use it properly.
Using the tutorial with artificial intelligence
The content of this tutorial has been prepared so that it can also be interpreted by artificial intelligence systems.
If you want, you can copy the tutorial’s starting link, paste it into an AI, and ask any question related to VolumTransport: how a specific option works, what a calculation mode is for, when to use the app, or what limitations it has.
The AI will respond based on the information contained in this tutorial.
Tutorial link:
https://aplicacionesherrbri.com/tutorial/00-presentation/
Origin and philosophy of the application
VolumTransport was not created by a software company or an external developer.
It was developed entirely by a transport professional, based on real everyday problems in delivery and cargo loading. With no similar tools available on the Google Play Store, the decision was made to create a practical app focused on real needs.
For this reason, the app prioritizes practical usefulness over complex or purely theoretical solutions.
If you ever have questions, suggestions, or notice something that could be improved, you can send an email and you will receive a reply as soon as possible.
What VolumTransport does (and what it does not do)
The main goal of VolumTransport is to calculate how a load fits into a given space and whether it fits or does not fit according to the dimensions you enter.
In addition to the “fits / does not fit” result, the app can also show useful data such as occupancy percentage, weight and, if you enable it, economic results. Throughout this tutorial, you will see all available options step by step.
To perform these calculations, the app uses a method known as bin packing.
What does this mean?
Bin packing is a way to calculate how to place multiple items inside a limited space
(for example, a vehicle) while making the best possible use of the available space.
This method makes it possible to estimate the real occupancy without physically testing every combination.
How is it different from other methods?
Unlike a calculation based only on total volume—which only adds up space and may fail in real life—
bin packing takes into account the real dimensions (length, width, and height) and how items actually fit.
Its goal is to provide a practical and quick estimate,
supported by a 3D visualization, to help you make decisions before doing the job.
The application places items following logical rules of volume, orientation, and space usage. The result is a reference and a helpful guide for the professional.
It is important to be clear that:
- The app does not decide how the space must be organized.
- The app does not replace the transporter’s experience.
- The person loading the goods is always the final responsible party.
Each professional may load goods differently depending on their criteria, experience, or the circumstances of the service. VolumTransport acts as an advanced calculator, not as an automatic command.
General notes about the entire application
When the app was designed, it was taken into account that it can be difficult to understand during the first steps. That is why help has been added on every screen.
This help is shown with the information icon (the i inside a circle). It explains what is on each screen and what it is for, guiding the user so they don’t get stuck.
Versions
There are four types of app versions:
All of them calculate how many boxes fit in the vehicle, but as you need more information or more features, you may encounter limitations depending on the version.
To buy a version, you can do it from the Upgrade screen.
Summary
Languages
VolumTransport is available in multiple languages.
App languages:
English (en), Arabic (ar), Bangla (bn), Basque (ba), Bulgarian (bg), Catalan (ca), Chinese (zh), Croatian (hr), Czech (cs), Danish (da), Dutch (nl), Estonian (et), Finnish (fi), French (fr), Galician (gl), German (de), Greek (el), Hebrew (iw), Hindi (hi), Hungarian (hu), Indonesian (id), Irish (ga), Italian (it), Japanese (ja), Korean (ko), Lao (lo), Latvian (lv), Lithuanian (lt), Luxembourgish (lb), Maltese (mt), Nepali (ne), Norwegian (nb), Persian (fa), Polish (pl), Portuguese (pt), Punjabi (Pakistan) (pa-rpk) (Shahmukhi script), Romanian (ro), Russian (ru), Slovak (sk), Slovenian (sl), Spanish (es), Swedish (sv), Thai (th), Turkish (tr), Ukrainian (uk), Urdu (ur), Vietnamese (vi).
Tutorial languages:
English (en), German (de), Bangla (bn), Bulgarian (bg), Czech (cs), Simplified Chinese (zh), Korean (ko), Croatian (hr), Danish (da), Slovak (sk), Slovenian (sl), Spanish (es), Estonian (et), Finnish (fi), French (fr), Greek (el), Hebrew (iw), Hindi (hi), Hungarian (hu), Indonesian (id), Italian (it), Japanese (ja), Lao (lo), Latvian (lv), Lithuanian (lt), Dutch (nl), Nepali (ne), Norwegian (no), Persian (fa), Polish (pl), Portuguese (pt), Punjabi (Pakistan) (pa-rpk) (Shahmukhi script), Romanian (ro), Russian (ru), Swedish (sv), Thai (th), Turkish (tr), Ukrainian (uk), Urdu (ur), Vietnamese (vi), Arabic (ar).
This tutorial is still under development, but if you have any questions or need clarification, you can email: