[Boatanchors] Shipping damage

RAY FRIESS rayfrijr at msn.com
Tue Nov 27 15:32:45 EST 2018


Now I have an issue to deal with at the post office.  I sent someone a swan 500 and power supply.  Two separate boxes.  Power supply showed up.  The radio has vanished into the twilight zone

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________________________________
From: boatanchors-bounces at mailman.qth.net <boatanchors-bounces at mailman.qth.net> on behalf of Bry Carling <af4k at hotmail.com>
Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2018 2:08:11 PM
To: Rob Atkinson
Cc: Boat Anchors List
Subject: Re: [Boatanchors] Shipping damage

It’s not just The handling that is now a problem (although last week I got some LMR400 cables that they managed to CRUSH the rings of The PL259 plugs on, rendering them unusable. The real problem is if you have an ACCOUNT with them they cheat you and charge considerably more than the prices they quote you and make it very difficult for you to look up the actual charges on your account. FEDEX soaked us for 2 years before we could get to the bottom of what those miscreants were doing.

Best regards - Bry Carling, AF4K





On Nov 25, 2018, at 6:00 AM, Rob Atkinson <ranchorobbo at gmail.com<mailto:ranchorobbo at gmail.com>> wrote:

The Fed Ex UPS etc. shipping business has changed dramatically in the
past few years.  Millions of people now buy on-line -- Amazon even
does its own shipping.  The process has streamlined to the point that
heavy shippers (manufacturers and other high volume outlets) ship in
bulk (free shipping!).   The system may be geared towards this with
the result that individuals pay more to ship odd single items.

Another aspect to this is that the handling operations have been
increasingly geared to speedily handle the majority of packages, which
are carefully engineered enclosures that suspend and protect the
usually light weight product to maximize protection and minimize
expense.  Ever order a modern product on-line and get it shipped to
your home?  The packaging is a work of mechanical engineering.    The
system which handles millions of these items is simply not optimized
for the occasional tube rig or receiver--both being heavy and fragile.
 The result is a smashed set.  We are not going to change UPS et al.
We have to up our game on packaging.  This is why I've contended that
anything weighing over 70 lbs probably should be in a crate lined with
styrofoam slabs on all sides with the item immobilized.  Bubble wrap
and a cardboard box won't cut it.   Personally, I think I'd rather
haul my stuff to a hamfest.

73

Rob
K5UJ
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