Thread Number: 2075
How am I ever gonna ship this?? |
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Post# 66514 , Reply# 2   5/12/2005 at 12:07 (6,922 days old) by jdinstl ()   |   | |
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You can forget anyone here trying to talk you *out* of a machine! :) Seriously, nice piece of equipment, I hope you get it! Keep us posted! John |
Post# 66515 , Reply# 3   5/12/2005 at 12:33 (6,922 days old) by veg-o-matic (Baltimore, Hon!)   |   | |
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Post# 66516 , Reply# 4   5/12/2005 at 13:26 (6,922 days old) by geoffdelp (SAUK RAPIDS)   |   | |
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Craters and Freighters? CLICK HERE TO GO TO geoffdelp's LINK |
Post# 66517 , Reply# 5   5/12/2005 at 13:27 (6,922 days old) by appliguy (Oakton Va.)   |   | |
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Post# 66519 , Reply# 6   5/12/2005 at 13:49 (6,922 days old) by Launderess (Quiet Please, There´s a Lady on Stage)   |   | |
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If the seller is willing to play ball, and will securely pack/prepare the item, see if it can go UPS freight. If not the best way can think of is Craters and Freighters. Count on paying several hundred dollars (they are very expensive), but know their stuff. You can also look around for other shipping services, some will only "blanket ship", which is less than the total palleting/crating service C&F offers, but may work if the unit only has to travel short distance. Another option is one of the drop off freight services, but again that requires the shipper to play ball. You now know why so many great units sit on Fleabay. Unless one lives locally, shipping will always more often than not equal or exceed the cost of the item. Expensive as C&F are, they really are the only one's I'd trust to pack something. Remember if the seller washes his/her hands of anything besides letting whomever is shipping in the door to get at the item, you are putting allot of faith in that shipper. If anything happens to your baby, it is going to be between you and the shipper, as the seller is likely to wash their hands of any responsibility. Best of British luck, Launderess |
Post# 66524 , Reply# 8   5/12/2005 at 14:40 (6,922 days old) by veg-o-matic (Baltimore, Hon!)   |   | |
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Frankly, I think blanket-wrapping would be the way to go, but that's just me. This is the way the washer would be transported if you were moving your household from one city to another. The problem is (and I've run into this before), not every shipper will do it this way, and not everyone wants to deal with a "small" shipment like this. Plycon Van Lines is one company that will blanket-wrap, but I had zero luck getting any action out of them. There was an outfit in FL called General Delivery that did excellent work at reasonable prices. Naturally, they went out of business. Sure hope you can get this, even if you have to go the C&F route. Oh, well. Who needs a college education, anyway? ;) veg |
Post# 66525 , Reply# 9   5/12/2005 at 15:09 (6,921 days old) by gansky1 (Omaha, The Home of the TV Dinner!)   |   | |
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I've used Beltman Shipping a couple of times, very reasonable and very good. Call Michelle at 800-959-8880. All you really need is to have it wrapped and strapped to a pallet, a full crate and packing really isn't necessary. In the pics on ebay, that looks like a 1-18 washer - notice the timer control markings are on the right side of the panel and there are two sets of hoses coming from the water faucets above the WW for sale. This is the same seller (tidesindirtsout) that had a Westinghouse washer (or was it a dryer or both?) pictured with some vintage boxes of detergent on it they were offering for sale. |
Post# 66535 , Reply# 10   5/12/2005 at 17:01 (6,921 days old) by goatfarmer (South Bend, home of Champions)   |   | |
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Post# 66542 , Reply# 11   5/12/2005 at 18:33 (6,921 days old) by drmitch ()   |   | |
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Cool machine! Austin, you have a truck. Just pick me up on the way to Conn. and I`ll help you load it! |
Post# 66591 , Reply# 12   5/12/2005 at 22:06 (6,921 days old) by geoff (Cape Coral, FL)   |   | |
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Post# 66594 , Reply# 14   5/12/2005 at 22:09 (6,921 days old) by geoff (Cape Coral, FL)   |   | |
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Post# 66605 , Reply# 15   5/13/2005 at 00:36 (6,921 days old) by Launderess (Quiet Please, There´s a Lady on Stage)   |   | |
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If a local member can pick up the unit, it might be worth it to see if after packaging it will meet UPS's shipping guidelines. The extra bits could easily be shipped via UPS as a second shippment or by themselves to save on whatever method is going to be used to ship the washer itself. IIRC UPS's weight limit is around 150 or 200 lbs. Launderess |