Originally Posted by subwayrunner:
That is another thing. Crumbled up news paper IS NOT a proper packing material. It may look all nice when you pack it, but it flattens out along its travels and then you have nothing but an item flopping around in a box with paper.
When I get an item and open it up and see news paper packing I am already expecting to see damage.
That depends on how densely you pack the newspapers. If you just crumple them and leave them so there can still be movement you are right.
If you crumple them and pack them in until you can't fit any more in the box and it rigidly holds the form, I'll place that against packing peanuts any day.
Now if we get into the discussion of some amount of play being desirable to lower shock when items are dropped, then peanuts may provide some give.
It's somewhat analogous to the college physics/engineering club contest to design a container to help an egg survive being dropped from one or 2 stories up. If you have no play at all, the egg likely breaks.
For most cases for our trains, I'd prefer rigidly holding the item in the middle vs. loose packing that lets the item migrate to the edge of the package as the peanuts move around each time it gets dropped/thrown, etc.
Originally Posted by Pingman:
................Why go to the Post Office to ship items? They offer free p/u, at least in my location. Couldn't be simpler: print the postage at home and schedule a p/u--no lost time driving to and from the p.o.; no gas, etc. ..............
It's not always desirable to leave big packages on your doorstep all day until the PO shows up to pick them up.
Not everyone lives in neighborhoods where they can safely assume the item will always still be there when the PO arrives. (Even in neighborhoods that may be considered "safe", it's also a matter of personal comfort and assumed risk doing so, and in lots of places, it rains/snows sometimes. Starting off with a wet/snow covered package before the shipper even has i tin their possession is not a good recipe for success)
-Dave