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This has been a daunting task for awhile for me. But I'm about to embark upon the toughest year of my life so far and I've worked so hard to get to this point that I think I deserve a nice big ol' standard typewriter from Germany dammit. Problem is, I have no idea how to do shopping for typewriters that aren't domestic. Even Canada scared me because of the long travel distance.
Any suggestions, tips, or general things I might need t know in order to get a typewriter successfully across the Atlantic Ocean?
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I have bought several machines from Germany and had them sent to Australia. One in three (apx.) are damaged en route. The cause is always improper packaging.
My advice:
1. Review the thread 'Another machine damaged in the post'
2. Research and understand the correct way to package machines for transport.
3. Be patient, and only buy from sellers who agree to package to your specifications. Talk to them until you are assured that they will do things correctly, and drop the sale if you are not confident.
4. Be prepared to pay for the extra packing materials and time for the seller to pack properly.
5. EBay Germany is, compared to other places, virtually awash with great typewriters, and you have no need to deal with sellers you do not trust. Whatever it is you are looking for, another one will be along relatively soon.
Good luck.
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Also - the use of this sticker seems to help
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ztyper wrote:
I have no idea how to do shopping for typewriters that aren't domestic. Even Canada scared me because of the long travel distance.
I'm not following your logic. A typewriter sent from Toronto to you would travel a fraction of the distance compared to one sent from California. Domestic or international, once the travel distance is a certain length the package is going to be processed through a number of hubs and receive the same amount of handling. I'd even argue that distance has nothing to do with it: Even a typewriter sent across town by a local courier will arrive damaged if it isn't packaged correctly.
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Failing the special sticker, try putting a piece of two inch white masking tape on each face of the box. Write 'DELICATE INSTRUMENTS' on the tape with a thick red permanent marker. The white of the masking tape shows up against the brown cardboard box, so this 'Do It Yourself' label works rather well ! Of course, I'd swear that there are some operatives in parcels depots who regard 'Fragile' as a personal challenge !
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Greetings All
I decided to try an alternative to the stickers and it seems to have helped. Go to Google and search for "Fragile Stickers", you'll get pages of pictures of all sorts of stickers. Select the images you like, open them is a new tab or new window. Copy the image and paste onto a word document. Print the document on card stock, cut out the images and tape to the package. Saves having to wait for the stickers to arrive in the mail. All the best,
Sky