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Shipping tube amps - large, heavy, fragile. How do I get them there in one piece?
I'd really like to list these KR Audio amps on eBay, but am really concerned about the condition they'll be in once they make it to a buyer. They're 105 pounds each when crated. I shipped some beautiful B&W 802 speakers from PHX to ATL and Fedex broke BOTH of them even though they were in the factory boxes.
Is there a way to increase the odds that they'll still be working when they arrive at their new home? http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1451846769.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1451847608.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1451846805.jpg |
Short of putting a crate around that crate, I'm not sure. Seems a risky proposition. I think freight monkeys could break and anvil!
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How about some expanding foam packaging inside your crates?
Instapack Quick Rt in Stock - ULINE <iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/RveExrEjjFQ" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> Those heavy transformers make shipping a chore, for sure. I've had mixed results shipping some Hammond amplifiers, I usually end up building a box around them and bolt them to the box and fill with peanuts. Seems like heavy duty form-fitting foam bags might be better than peanuts though. |
I'd pull the tubes out, wrap them individually in foam or bubble wrap and ship separately from the amps (or pack them securely elsewhere inside the crate).
That and insure them up the wazoo. |
Find other people who have sold similar items, email them, and ask how they packed theirs.
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Is be afraid of that expanding foam knocking the tubes off as it grows. I think packing them seperately and bolting the main unit to the crate is a good idea.
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I agree. Leaving the tubes in place will subject them to every impact.
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Of course removing the tubes is #1 on the list. Takes 3 seconds. bubble wrap, and set aside. Maybe even send in a different box.
SmileWavy Im thinking that -after- the tubes are removed, you toss some of these heavy duty expando-packs in the crates to brace those huge transformers really well. Were the chassis of the amps somehow bolted to the bottom of the crate originally? |
Lots of expertise around shipping audio gear on either Audiokarma.org or audiogon.com.
I would probably even look at selling on Audiogon before ebay. |
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Well, to me its a specialized marketplace. I feel like the buyers and sellers really know their stuff and there is lot more high end and lesser known equipment represented than what you will see on eBay.
I have not sold on Audiogon, but did buy my turntable and preamp from sellers on the site. Both were great transactions. The classifieds on audiokarma are pretty good to, but i believe you have to pay a fee to have access. |
Just remove the tubes and ship them separately. I buy tubes by mail all the time, never had one break. They're a lot sturdier than light bulbs. You can go to any amp tech and he'll probably give you some old tube boxes out of the trash and then you wrap the tubes in tissue paper.
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Road trip!
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G900A using Tapatalk |
The tubes cost $525/pair, so they'll definitely get special handling! I have the original box and packing material for them.
KR Audio : KR 842VHD : tubeAudioPRODUCTS.com |
Package the tubes separately, as others have suggested.
I believe the assertion that FedEx guys think heavy means indestructible and I also believe they may be careless on purpose. They will TRY to destroy it. Those heavy transformers, regardless of packing, will at a minimum distort the chassis if/when it is subjected to trauma. I really don't trust those guys. Insure it for 10x the value. If the cost (to them) of damaging the items is in the $100,000 neighborhood, then perhaps they will be......at least reasonable in how they are handled. Either that or they will pay, which will catch their attention. |
It looks like they are packed two to a box with that soft black foam around them. Watch near the end.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8n4WVRKkmww |
Don't ship them using FedEx, UPS or USPS. Package them in crates and strap the crates to a pallet, then ship them LTL freight. Mark them for any handling instructions, classify them properly and buy insurance.
You can always double box them, with soft foam in between the two boxes to allow some movement. Package the tubes separately in large boxes with lots of soft foam. Don't use anything rigid. JR |
US cartage companies are known around the world as the most brutal carriers for shipping, incurring more damage than anywhere else. Since we have numerous small, heavy & expensive products our solution is to skid them for shipping. Package the tubes separately & strap the cartons to a skid with 'do not pile' signs on the skid. It won't be cheap but they will arrive intact most times.
Ian |
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