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Yo. [message #1952 is a reply to message #1942] |
Sat, 02 July 2005 20:35 |
Poindexter
Messages: 108 Registered: May 2009
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Ryan Tew of Red Dragon wants to use a Moebius in his room, and a Machine if available. The Moebius you used at the GPAF is at 6moons being reviewed, but should be back in time. The Machine you guys used got damaged when shipped back. I may be able to uncrunch it in time, maybe not; it has to be completely disassembled to refinish the chassis. I hope to be there in force, however; the Rocky has turned out to be a mayjah deal. Can't be there in scrawny person, though; as before. You going? Poinz
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Nah. [message #1958 is a reply to message #1953] |
Sun, 03 July 2005 10:38 |
Poindexter
Messages: 108 Registered: May 2009
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It's the Post Office, and those guys are just glacial when there's a problem. I'm just going to fix it. Meanwhile, I get to have a current version in my rig, which sounds substantially better than my Old Reliable Original. Front right corner got bashed. At least it was on the way to me, and not you or a client. It's a part of my education for this stuff, and so good that it happened (twice, now) early on. I'm learning that shipping damage is a major headache for any small mail-order business. The product has to be packed far better than if it were a big-box item, because it gets shipped all alone, rather than on a skip with two hundred others, and thus hoisted by a crane or forklift by the skip. I'm now packing in a bigger box, with the foam blocks all the way around, and putting plastic drywall cornerbead in all the corners, so the foam won't collapse when (I did not say if!) it gets thrown on a table edge on a corner. Not your fault, my man. Poinz
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My solution [message #1961 is a reply to message #1959] |
Sun, 03 July 2005 13:07 |
Bob Brines
Messages: 186 Registered: May 2009 Location: Hot Springs Village, AR
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I'm shipping 65lb and 90lb speakers by UPS. My latest, and seemingly effective solution is to wrap the speaker in two layers of 1" beadboard, put 4-ply cardboard corners on all eight corners, and put all of this in a box. I ship the plinth separate from the main cabinet because the cross-section of the plinth is larger than the cabinet and was taking all of the force. My experience is that all of the damage is done in the last 100 feet of the journey. The drivers can't lift the boxes, so rather than slide them gently off of the truck deck, they just push them off. The box drops 3 feet onto one corner. The cardboard corner blocks were the solution. They spread the force over the beadboard and keep the corner of the speaker from penetrating the box. I have tried wood crates, but the drivers hate them -- hard on the hands -- and make a speaceal effort to damage the shipment. Wood boxes are brittle enough to shatter unless they are prohibitively heavy. Cardboard boxes are more likely to stay together. I have a problem with lining the box with plywood. At my weights, the plywood might well cut through the box. What are your shipping weights? Bob
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