Tt

"TinWoodsmn"

25/01/2006 12:00 PM

(Possibly OT) Help in Dallas area

At last summer's wood show in Las Vegas, SWMBO had occasion to visit the
complementary Design Showcase, where she ordered a table and 4 chairs from a
South American manufacturer. The furniture has arrived in Dallas where the
receiver is awaiting our instructions to reship to us in northern
California. The shipment weighs under 200 lbs, but the transporters the
receiver uses charges for 1,000 lb minimum loads with prices approximating
$1.00/lb. We have contacted some pack and ship people in the Dallas area,
but their prices are only slightly better.

We are open to suggestions regarding choosing a company or method to ship
our furniture. Hopefully we won't have to pay the amounts we have already
encountered which are more than we paid for the furniture.

Thanks in advance for any words of wisdom.

TW


This topic has 6 replies

Vv

Vidkid26

in reply to "TinWoodsmn" on 25/01/2006 12:00 PM

27/01/2006 4:50 AM

On 2006-01-25 12:00:39 -0800, "TinWoodsmn" <[email protected]> said:
Try abfs.com


> At last summer's wood show in Las Vegas, SWMBO had occasion to visit
> the complementary Design Showcase, where she ordered a table and 4
> chairs from a South American manufacturer. The furniture has arrived in
> Dallas where the receiver is awaiting our instructions to reship to us
> in northern California. The shipment weighs under 200 lbs, but the
> transporters the receiver uses charges for 1,000 lb minimum loads with
> prices approximating $1.00/lb. We have contacted some pack and ship
> people in the Dallas area, but their prices are only slightly better.
>
> We are open to suggestions regarding choosing a company or method to
> ship our furniture. Hopefully we won't have to pay the amounts we have
> already encountered which are more than we paid for the furniture.
>
> Thanks in advance for any words of wisdom.
>
> TW

BT

"Bruce T"

in reply to "TinWoodsmn" on 25/01/2006 12:00 PM

26/01/2006 8:06 AM


"Mark & Juanita" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Wed, 25 Jan 2006 21:18:20 -0500, "Bruce T" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>>Generally speaking, you can arrange to have your stuff shipped to a local
>>freight terminal as part of a "full load". Costs are SUBSTANTIALLY less
>>this way. You can go to the terminal & pick the stuff up yourself.
>>
>>BruceT
>
> How does one go about requesting this? That sounds like a winner and
> something to file away for future reference.

Any reputable shipper/freight operator should offer this option. I have had
a number of items shipped to me using this technique. The downside is that
you have to wait for a full load to your local terminal to be put together
at the shipping terminal. This means you may have to wait a while, and of
course the longer the item sits in the terminal, the greater the likelyhood
of damage, etc. While I'm no expert on the trucking industry, it has always
seemd to me that this is pretty much Standard Procedure for shipping by
truck.

>
>
>
>>
>>
>>"TinWoodsmn" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>news:[email protected]...
>>> At last summer's wood show in Las Vegas, SWMBO had occasion to visit the
>>> complementary Design Showcase, where she ordered a table and 4 chairs
>>> from
>>> a South American manufacturer. The furniture has arrived in Dallas where
>>> the receiver is awaiting our instructions to reship to us in northern
>>> California. The shipment weighs under 200 lbs, but the transporters the
>>> receiver uses charges for 1,000 lb minimum loads with prices
>>> approximating
>>> $1.00/lb. We have contacted some pack and ship people in the Dallas
>>> area,
>>> but their prices are only slightly better.
>>>
>>> We are open to suggestions regarding choosing a company or method to
>>> ship
>>> our furniture. Hopefully we won't have to pay the amounts we have
>>> already
>>> encountered which are more than we paid for the furniture.
>>>
>>> Thanks in advance for any words of wisdom.
>>>
>>> TW
>>>
>>
>
>
> +--------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
>
> If you're gonna be dumb, you better be tough
>
> +--------------------------------------------------------------------------------+

BT

"Bruce T"

in reply to "TinWoodsmn" on 25/01/2006 12:00 PM

25/01/2006 9:18 PM

Generally speaking, you can arrange to have your stuff shipped to a local
freight terminal as part of a "full load". Costs are SUBSTANTIALLY less
this way. You can go to the terminal & pick the stuff up yourself.

BruceT


"TinWoodsmn" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> At last summer's wood show in Las Vegas, SWMBO had occasion to visit the
> complementary Design Showcase, where she ordered a table and 4 chairs from
> a South American manufacturer. The furniture has arrived in Dallas where
> the receiver is awaiting our instructions to reship to us in northern
> California. The shipment weighs under 200 lbs, but the transporters the
> receiver uses charges for 1,000 lb minimum loads with prices approximating
> $1.00/lb. We have contacted some pack and ship people in the Dallas area,
> but their prices are only slightly better.
>
> We are open to suggestions regarding choosing a company or method to ship
> our furniture. Hopefully we won't have to pay the amounts we have already
> encountered which are more than we paid for the furniture.
>
> Thanks in advance for any words of wisdom.
>
> TW
>

CS

"Charles Spitzer"

in reply to "TinWoodsmn" on 25/01/2006 12:00 PM

25/01/2006 1:28 PM

http://freightquote.com

"TinWoodsmn" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> At last summer's wood show in Las Vegas, SWMBO had occasion to visit the
> complementary Design Showcase, where she ordered a table and 4 chairs from
> a South American manufacturer. The furniture has arrived in Dallas where
> the receiver is awaiting our instructions to reship to us in northern
> California. The shipment weighs under 200 lbs, but the transporters the
> receiver uses charges for 1,000 lb minimum loads with prices approximating
> $1.00/lb. We have contacted some pack and ship people in the Dallas area,
> but their prices are only slightly better.
>
> We are open to suggestions regarding choosing a company or method to ship
> our furniture. Hopefully we won't have to pay the amounts we have already
> encountered which are more than we paid for the furniture.
>
> Thanks in advance for any words of wisdom.
>
> TW
>

MJ

Mark & Juanita

in reply to "TinWoodsmn" on 25/01/2006 12:00 PM

25/01/2006 8:18 PM

On Wed, 25 Jan 2006 21:18:20 -0500, "Bruce T" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>Generally speaking, you can arrange to have your stuff shipped to a local
>freight terminal as part of a "full load". Costs are SUBSTANTIALLY less
>this way. You can go to the terminal & pick the stuff up yourself.
>
>BruceT

How does one go about requesting this? That sounds like a winner and
something to file away for future reference.



>
>
>"TinWoodsmn" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> At last summer's wood show in Las Vegas, SWMBO had occasion to visit the
>> complementary Design Showcase, where she ordered a table and 4 chairs from
>> a South American manufacturer. The furniture has arrived in Dallas where
>> the receiver is awaiting our instructions to reship to us in northern
>> California. The shipment weighs under 200 lbs, but the transporters the
>> receiver uses charges for 1,000 lb minimum loads with prices approximating
>> $1.00/lb. We have contacted some pack and ship people in the Dallas area,
>> but their prices are only slightly better.
>>
>> We are open to suggestions regarding choosing a company or method to ship
>> our furniture. Hopefully we won't have to pay the amounts we have already
>> encountered which are more than we paid for the furniture.
>>
>> Thanks in advance for any words of wisdom.
>>
>> TW
>>
>


+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------+

If you're gonna be dumb, you better be tough

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------+

EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to "TinWoodsmn" on 25/01/2006 12:00 PM

27/01/2006 5:29 AM


>> The shipment weighs under 200 lbs, but the
>> transporters the receiver uses charges for 1,000 lb minimum loads with
>> prices approximating $1.00/lb. We have contacted some pack and ship
>> people in the Dallas area, but their prices are only slightly better.
>>
>> We are open to suggestions regarding choosing a company or method to ship
>> our furniture. Hopefully we won't have to pay the amounts we have already
>> encountered which are more than we paid for the furniture.

You need to know the weight, the dimensions of the shipping containers, how
it is packed.

Then you can call a couple of carriers or try www.freightquotes.com
Weight is only one factor. Shipments are put into classifications that take
volume, or the space taken up on the truck, into consideration. 200 pounds
of furniture will cost more to ship than 200 pounds of steel coils, copper
wire, or aluminum tooling.

If the chairs are individually packed in cartons, it may be able to go UPS
or FedEx ground. Weight will not be a problem, but size can be for these
guys.

If it goes by truck, a WAG will be well over $500 for that distance.


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