hi all
on bigger items, believe it or not, i have used greyhound and not had any  
problem and its very cost effective
i agree on the fork lift problem
i had one victor one cabinet sent to me from vermont to florida that had a  
gaping hole in the back of it from a fork lift and ups was the provider in 
this  case
zono
 
 
In a message dated 1/1/2010 10:43:44 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
abefed...@gmail.com writes:

Hi  All,
I hate to tell all of you this but there is no magic bullet. I have  been in
the art business for 35 years and have used FedX , UPS and others  and the
fact is that you gotta build a box that will take just about any  form of 
bad
treatment. One of my nephews grew up working 1st for FedX -4  years and 
UPS-6
years and now works for a speciality shipper and freight  company that deals
in special shipment of special goods. The stories he  told of both companies
made my head hurt and no matter what shipper I use I  build a box that will
make it almost anywhere and my last item still did  not get there. They 
drive
a fork lift arm right through it and I used 3/4  plywood for sides. 3 months
later the customer got a ck for $15000.00. But  they did EVERYTHING they
could to keep from paying the claim. Photos  showing how the crate was put
together shamed them and a bit of advice from  my nephew to stay on them at
least twice a week really worked.

For  our phono's small units well packed under normal conditions should  get
there. Larger units, either know someone who can get it back to you- or  pay
the very high price of craters and freighters. On more expensive  machines 
it
is OK but on standard ones the freight charge can make it  really to
expensive to purchase a machine like a c-250. I am working  through that on 
a
machine now.

But bottom line on a common carrier  youse pays your money and takes your
chances

Happy New  Year
Abe

On Fri, Jan 1, 2010 at 8:31 PM, Bill Boruff  <boru...@flash.net> wrote:

> Steve-
> FedEx  does  not always use kid gloves when handling packages. During this
> past  year I shipped a  banner front  Edison Home in 3 boxes with  each
> carefully packed to withstand any rough handling. One box was for  the 
case,
> one for the mechanism and one for the horn. The mechanism  was badly 
damaged
> when  the tines of a fork lift  went  completely through the center of its
> box. The motor frame was broken  into pieces and  the bolts holding the 
motor
> frame to the  bedplate were sheared off. It was the last time I shipped a
> machine  via FedEx!
> Bill
>
>
> On Jan 1, 2010, at 3:34 PM,  Steven Medved wrote:
>
>
>> I highly recommend if anyone  purchases a phono that the seller says will
>> be sent UPS, ask them  to send it Fed Ex ground.  I have had 2 triumphs 
and
>> an order  of auto parts damaged by UPS.  UPS is wonderful for small,  
light
>> parts, but larger ones seem to get dropper or crushed by  their automatic
>> alligator mouth sorting  system.
>>
>> Save a phono, use Fed Ex.  Also Fed Ex is  much easier to collect from if
>> there is an  accident.
>>
>>  Steve
>>
>>
>>
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>>
>
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