I have bought something from someone in San Diego (CA) for USD20.00 and I live in Australia.
In order to have it shipped to Australia I am getting quotes between USD300 and USD500 for airmail which, just quietly, is freaking me out. I want to avoid paying 25 times the price just to send it to me.
I am seeking to have this item shipped to me by sea (I assume it will be much cheaper although it will take much longer).
Can anyone give me a URL to a website where I can find out how much it would cost to send this item to Australia by sea rather than air.
The packge dimensions are around 30 inches by 30 inches by 12 inches and it only weighs around 8 pounds.
happyheathen: I looked at USPS and at 30 + 30 + 12 + 12 it exceeds the 79 inch girth maximum by around 5 inches. Thanks for trying.
LolaCocaCola: I know, but when you calculate the volume of 30 by 30 x 12 you end up with a volume that translates to around 19kg or around 40 pounds (if I have done that right) and that’s what causes the problem.
I have looked at ups.com and fedex.com and they both give the couple of hundred dollars which when I convert to Australian dollars is more than I make in a week at work !
That’s kinda why I was thinking ship by sea rather than by air.
I recently received a package from my sister, shipped from Houston Texas to Korea–not as far as to Australia, but not too different I guess. The package was a little bigger than yours, and probably weighed 15 pounds or so, packing included. US postal service airmail was going to be about $300 or $350, I think. Surface mail was $43, and it took about 2 months to get here. Sorry, no URL.
Caught@Work In your first post you say that it weighs 8 pounds
You then go on to say, in another post, that
Excuse me. Volume and weight are two different things. You don’t seem to grasp this.
Which is is? The most important thing to the cost is the weight. Did the person from whom you are buying the object tell you that it weighed 8 pounds? Where did you get that number?
And where did you come up with this new number for the weight?
samclem: Sorry, I know that is confusing, but when shipping by air, the shipping companies calculate one of two ways. Either the raw weight (if the dimensions are small), but on a ‘calculated’ weight if the item is above certain dimensions. They call it a ‘dimensional weight’.
So, because this item is more than 1 cubic foot, they calculate the dimension weight which is 30x30x12/194 which is 55 pounds, which even thought the thing it relatively light (it’s actually a plush toy), the dimensional weight is killing me.
That’s why I think by sea would be cheaper and I was hoping someone had shipped by sea (no pun!) and could give me a site I could check for pricing.
You might want to post your question over at the The G’Dope. TheLoadedDog works for AustraliaPost and I’m sure he’d have some idea of which packages arriving here are costing the least to send.
G’day Caught@work. I’ve got your email, but I don’t think I can help as much as someone in the USA. Those charges do sound about right. Australia Post uses the wonderful unit of the “cubic kilogram”, so it’s not surprising that the Americans are doing the same thing. Because I work for Australia Post, I only come in contact with American items that have been sent via the USPS, so I’m not familiar with the competitors’ charges.
A radical solution could be to get someone in the US to remove the padding, and have it replaced here in Australia. I don’t know how easy it would be to do this and not get the toy looking like it’s been through a few rounds in the ring, but it’s worth a thought. A toymaker or upholsterer might replace it for you for a few bucks.
On the stuffing, I’ve since been told that it’s not ‘soft’ stuffing, but hard polystyrene balls (kinda like the stuff you put in beanbags I suppose).
I’ve asked how much ‘damage’ their would be to remove the balls (ow!) and we can restuff them in Australia.
But keep trying !!
Thanks.