Well, tomorrow I am expecting my Pelican V800 rifle case from Midway. I don't expect shipping or packaging damage to a shipping container...buy imagine the irony.
Ordered a barrel several years ago and the mailman delivered an EMPTY tube.
Obviously it was never found.
Moral of the story ?
ALWAYS pay shipping insurance unless you can live with the loss of the value.
Just maybe there was a milkie bone in there and the postal puppy needed a snack.Sometimes not packaging an item properly can result in shipping container damage beyond the control of the shipper
You're going to have to add my package to the list. The vice I ordered from you has been about 70 miles from my house since Sunday and hasn't moved.I have been shipping priority mail
ever since going in business. I wont
say they are flawless, but pretty close.
Since the covid problem, I have only
had the one package that went to Hi. that took
several days to many, but it finally arrived.
If the entire postal service was as good as my
route carrier, the system wouldnt be in trouble.
LDS
Every picture in this thread is an example of inadequate packaging. While the inflated bubbles are light, they don't keep heavy things from moving around. I've quit buying bullets from forum members unless I really trust them. it is just too awkward to say "you didn't package them right, it's your responsibility." And don't get me started on insurance. It's not insurance if it takes me 10 hours of frustration to recover $100. I don't work for $10 an hour and work shouldn't be frustration. Tape is my insurance. Package things so they can't move around and tape them up.
That is the beauty of flat rate boxes. No need to use light weight packaging material. Stuff paper in there until nothing can move, tape it up real well, use a barcoded label and it will get there 99.99999% of the time. The exceptions are plane crashes and Truck wrecks with fire.
--Jerry