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#31
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On Thu, 13 Oct 2005 10:23:14 GMT, "Michael A. Terrell"
wrote: wrote: UPS has been OK with me, except when you haver to talk to them on the phone. In one case, they kept calling back to my house. I had received one of their calls there while home for a doctor's appointment and told them not to call there again. No such luck. Then you can never talk to the same idiot twice. They introduce themselves as "account executives", but these cheap-ass "executives" can't accept an incoming call -- you get the luck of the draw from whatever connects them. Then the dorks go tappity-tap on their keyboards as you describe the problem, but the info never gets to the next dork you talk to -- it's a brand new day and you have to explain the whole damned thing again. Last year, a friend was getting DSL and the equipment was UPSed to her. On delivry day, she looked at the website during the day (Friday). Late in the day, it was recorded as "no such address". She lives on a short stub (three houses worth) of a street which had a section removed for a throughway -- twenty years ago -- and half the time, they still lose it. We then told them to deliver it instead to the UPS facility near where she worked -- on Monday, so she could pck it up at lunch time. I did that part for her. The wackos said they had to deliver to an address. I asked why they didn't know the address of their own facility ten miles north. So they changed their story to they couldn't just send it to another facility -- it had to be a house or business address. Since she had just started a new job and didn't want it coming to work on her third day there, I told them to just divert it to my address 25 miles farther north. They agreed to do that. In the end, I went to her place to accept a completely different furniture shipment (real trucking company for this one) on Monday. When I arrived, the UPS package was sitting on her doorstep. To hell with any instructions UPS had agreed to. Thirty of those bozos would have a cumulative IQ of fifteen. I had the USPS return a package to the sender for "No such address". My shop was directly across the street from the post office. PO buildings act like Kryptonite on UPSers. It was all you could see when you looked out their front windows, yet they couldn't find it. UPS would leave my stuff at the wrong door, so if i was expecting anything I had to check quite often to make sure someone didn't walk off with it. |
#32
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![]() "Dave Heil" wrote in message news ![]() Airborne Express brought a fragile e-bay purchase during a snow. Rather than driving up my drive (which I'd done with a front wheel drive automobile, the guy placed the parcel atop my postal mailbox alongside the road where it could have toppled to the pavement or have been easily stolen by anyone. I had a nice experience with AE once, and only once. It's the one and only time I ever received anything through them. Great record in my book, (0 for 1)... Received an eBay package. Not too big of a deal, wasn't worth much, but they delivered it to the wrong address. Was delivered to the neighbor across the street, on a Friday. They were gone all weekend, so it didn't get to me until Monday. Worst part, it was on their doorstep, wasn't put in the porch, and it rained the entire weekend. Box and contents were so saturated with water, the neighbor barely go it to me without it completely falling apart... Worse yet, the label was made out to the proper address, their tracking site indicated the proper address, but when the driver logged the delivery, he even indicated that it was delivered to the wrong address. He wrote the address he dropped it at, instead of the my address; how blind can you be?! If only the shipper would have given me the tracking info, I could have gone across the street and gotten it myself before it got too wet, but they were apparently too lazy to email it to me, so I didn't find out until after I got the package from the neighbor and looked up the tracking info online. |
#33
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#34
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Phil Kane wrote:
On 13 Oct 2005 06:21:10 -0700, wrote: In the case of UPS it seems to have more to do with the shipper than anything else. And sometimes it's the gremlins. Two horror stories: 1. Six years ago I shipped an AEA TNC to Timewave for an upgrade, UPS insured. It was well-packed - I've spent many years doing domestic and overseas packing of fragile household goods and electronic equipment (and during the 1967 War a commercial ocean shipper hired me to so some of it because his regular staff was out doing military service) so I DO know how to pack well. Timewave reported that the knob and shaft on the only front-panel control was bent and had to be replaced. Fast forward to last year. I had to ship another TNC to them, and mindful of the first experience, put TWO INCHES of snug-wrapped bubble-pack around the instrument, then two inches of sheet foam around that. I swear - the packing must have weighed as much as the instrument. You guessed it - Timewave reported that the control was damaged in shipment although the box and the packing was intact.. Go figure. Sounds like bovine excrement to me. I have dealt with companies in the past that always found certain things "broken" on items returned for repair, even when they weren't. It is a great way of bringing in a little extra money, and the customer has no way of proving the lie... well, unless the company tells the same lame story over and over again like Timewave appears to have done. 2. Quite a number of years ago I had a commercial art framer send a one-of-a-kind drawing cross-country to a friend of mine for a special birthday. It went UPS insured. When it arrived, my friend reported that there was a small crack in the glass frame and I reported that to the shipper. I'm betting this wasn't packed the way UPS says you should pack fragile items: double box, 2 inches of packing around the item, and 2 inches of packing around the inside box. You cannot just throw a glass frame into a box, and fill the box with peanuts, and expect it to survive. The frame needs a single wrap of thin foam (cardboard thickness), a piece of wood, or masonite front and back taped firmly. This should then be placed in a sealed plastic bag. This composit should be wrapped loosly with 2 inches of bubble wrap, and boxed. The inside box should then have another 2 inches of loosly packed peanuts. You can set the stage for a great amount of damage to a fragile item by simply packing the peanuts too tightly in the box. I have *never*, repeat *never* had a problem with UPS damaging an item that was properly packed. On the one or two occasions I have had a damage problem, the items were heavy, and were tossed into the box, with a little bit of crumbled newspaper thrown in on top to fill up the empty space. Or someone has shipped a BA that originally was shipped with the transformer removed, with the transformer installed... stupid stuff. That isn't UPS's fault, that is the shipper's fault. UPS moves quickly, packages literally fly through their hub. UPS gives recommendations on how to pack to survive. If you don't follow them, you are taking a very big risk. FedEX's ground operations are identical to UPS's. FedEX's air freight operations gain some protection from damage by forcing you to use their standardized boxes. -Chuck |
#35
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Back in the minicomputer days, we had a disk drive for a DEC PDP11-70 on
order. In those days drives were large and heavy, and a single drive might take up one-third of a rack. Well, the freight truck driver pulled up near the loading dock, opened the rear doors and backed the semi up to the loading dock. The driver got out again and looked around for unloading help. Not finding any help, he climbed inside the trailer and rolled the 120 pound crate out the back of the truck and down onto the loading dock. The height difference between the floor of the trailer and the loading dock was about four feet. The driver pulled forward, closed the trailer doors and drove off. Needless to say the drive didn't work, and the shock detector inside the packing crate indicated the drive had suffered at least one large impulse during shipment from the factory to the customer. "Chuck Harris" wrote in message ... Phil Kane wrote: [stuff] Sounds like bovine excrement to me. I have dealt with companies in the past... [stuff] |
#36
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In article ,
"John N9JG" wrote: Back in the minicomputer days, we had a disk drive for a DEC PDP11-70 on order. In those days drives were large and heavy, and a single drive might take up one-third of a rack. Well, the freight truck driver pulled up near the loading dock, opened the rear doors and backed the semi up to the loading dock. The driver got out again and looked around for unloading help. Not finding any help, he climbed inside the trailer and rolled the 120 pound crate out the back of the truck and down onto the loading dock. The height difference between the floor of the trailer and the loading dock was about four feet. The driver pulled forward, closed the trailer doors and drove off. Needless to say the drive didn't work, and the shock detector inside the packing crate indicated the drive had suffered at least one large impulse during shipment from the factory to the customer. ObAlsoRealLife: the quote below came about following the revelation that "ruggedised" PDP-11s were made for the military that were *intended* to be airdropped and remain fully functional. The bind moggles.... ----------------------------------------------------------------------- If being dropped out of an aircraft into what is, for all anyone knows, a minefield is "moderately rough handling", what would constitute "rough handling" or "very rough handling"? -- David Richerby Being shipped UPS. -- Dave Brown ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Chris. |
#37
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On Fri, 14 Oct 2005 16:15:37 -0400, Chuck Harris wrote:
have weighed as much as the instrument. You guessed it - Timewave reported that the control was damaged in shipment although the box and the packing was intact.. Go figure. Sounds like bovine excrement to me. I have dealt with companies in the past that always found certain things "broken" on items returned for repair, even when they weren't. It is a great way of bringing in a little extra money, and the customer has no way of proving the lie... well, unless the company tells the same lame story over and over again like Timewave appears to have done. The cost of the replacement of the control was included in the flat advertised price of the upgrade so a) it didn't cost me anything and b) they would have lost money by "just doing it" unless necessary. special birthday. It went UPS insured. When it arrived, my friend reported that there was a small crack in the glass frame and I reported that to the shipper. I'm betting this wasn't packed the way UPS says you should pack fragile items: This was done by a commercial art framer and shipper who ships fragile and valuable artwork all over the world. I'm sure that they knew what they were doing. The problem wasn't the way it was shipped by them - a small crack can result from many causes including stress relief in the glass - and is no big deal compared to the condition that it was returned in. We had the "as arrived at consignee destination" pictures and the "as received in return by original shipper" pictures to prove it. The bottom line was that UPS figured that this would be covered by the shipper's insurance so they didn't give a flying fig about what happened to the package as they repacked it (by their own request) and returned it. UPS moves quickly, packages literally fly through their hub. UPS gives recommendations on how to pack to survive. If you don't follow them, you are taking a very big risk. A former neighbor retired as the regional UPS customer service chief some years ago. The stories she told after retirement which were similar to mine would make your hair stand up. Perhaps they now have a better grade of handler ???? I seem to feel that they have a better grade of delivery persons over the last decade. FedEX's ground operations are identical to UPS's. FedEx Ground is the former RPM. I have never had problems with them and lately have done most of my business with FedEx. FedEX's air freight operations gain some protection from damage by forcing you to use their standardized boxes. Never had problems with them. -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane |
#38
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Phil Kane wrote:
On Fri, 14 Oct 2005 16:15:37 -0400, Chuck Harris wrote: have weighed as much as the instrument. You guessed it - Timewave reported that the control was damaged in shipment although the box and the packing was intact.. Go figure. Sounds like bovine excrement to me. Ya wanna know my gripe with both of them? I live in Puerto Rico USA and neither of the two will treat this location as domestic USA. Its International Air pricing right down the line and discounted "ground" services are not offered. The Postal Service doesn't have this lack of imagination and gets "ground" (Parcel Post) here with sea shipping in a few days at rates parallel with anywhere else in the US. -Bill M |
#39
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Bill wrote:
Ya wanna know my gripe with both of them? I live in Puerto Rico USA and neither of the two will treat this location as domestic USA. Its International Air pricing right down the line and discounted "ground" services are not offered. The Postal Service doesn't have this lack of imagination and gets "ground" (Parcel Post) here with sea shipping in a few days at rates parallel with anywhere else in the US. -Bill M It is an interesting gripe. The Postal service is US government subsidized, UPS and FedEX are private companies. Why should they charge you anything other than what it costs them to service your location? They charge everyone else a rate that is graduated based on distance traveled. -Chuck |
#40
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Chuck Harris wrote:
Bill wrote: Ya wanna know my gripe with both of them? I live in Puerto Rico USA It is an interesting gripe. The Postal service is US government subsidized, UPS and FedEX are private companies. Why should they charge you anything other than what it costs them to service your location? They charge everyone else a rate that is graduated based on distance traveled. -Chuck In fairness there are actually import 'technicalities' for shipping certain items to PR and implications of the local tax structure, not unlike the Canadian scenario. Not that they do a good job with the Canadian market either. But UPS/Fedex/etc simply refuse to equally service this market of 4 million US people and the sellers/vendors that have obliged themselves to shipping ONLY via UPS/Fedex wind up refusing our patronage. I can't imagine them (or the affected vendors) telling everyone in say, the Toronto market, that "sorry, we don't serve that area" but thats the case here and I know Alaska and Hawaii suffer much of the same. Kinda screwy but thats why its MY gripe! The thieving bandits at USPS work great for me...who needs those others? USPS will get a package to me from NY as cheap as it will get it to California, and often, quicker. -Bill |
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