Tool Talk

General Category => General Discussion => Topic started by: Bad 31 on March 13, 2017, 09:43:24 PM

Title: Shipping Costs
Post by: Bad 31 on March 13, 2017, 09:43:24 PM
What do you find is the most economical way to ship a package that's too large for the USPS flat rate boxes?
Title: Re: Shipping Costs
Post by: Papaw on March 13, 2017, 10:03:22 PM
Depends on how quick you want it delivered. LTL truck freight is probably cheapest, but slow. LTL- Less Than Load. The trailer may sit somewhere until it has enough freight to pay, or the freight may cross several docks between shipping and receiving points.
Title: Re: Shipping Costs
Post by: Bad 31 on March 13, 2017, 10:20:18 PM
I'm talking about something like a tool box, not a rolling cart. But too big for a flat rate box. Taking 5 to 7 days is not a big deal. Paying $50 per shipment is.
Title: Re: Shipping Costs
Post by: international3414 on March 14, 2017, 03:50:25 AM
fedex,not ups
Title: Re: Shipping Costs
Post by: Lewill2 on March 14, 2017, 07:18:07 AM
I've heard that some guys use Fastenal but I have never looked into it. I assume that you have to take it to your local store and then the receiver has to go to their local store for pickup.

The Post Office takes stuff bigger than their flat rate boxes but there is a size and weight limit. There again I don't know what those limits are.
Title: Re: Shipping Costs
Post by: amecks on March 14, 2017, 07:35:22 AM
Once you have the package size and weight you can use the shipper's website to calculate cost.  USPS, UPS and FedEx all have cost calculators.  If you don't know where it will ship (like when you sell on eBay)  you will have to estimate maximum cost (I use a zip code for Los Angeles).
If you don't have a scale, find a store that you frequent that ships packages.  They may even ship it for you.  If they're a regular shipper they'll even have a discount.
Al
Title: Re: Shipping Costs
Post by: Bill Houghton on March 14, 2017, 10:15:44 AM
I've used Fastenal's service once, and the price for the item was pretty decent.  And the stuff stays in Fastenal's hands the whole time, which may decrease the odds that some amped-up forklift driver will play whack-a-mole with it, as happened with one item I shipped back to Ohio from California (the forks went all the way through the pallet-sized box I'd built around the machine, which was bolted to the pallet on which I built the box; just barely caught air all the way through).