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FEDEX Shipping and Dryage Questions
So this is the first time I am trying to help the team ship the robot...
I am trying to understand this shipping, dryage procedure. Fedex will ship our robot from home to a dryage location (MCS)? If I understand this, we can use the Fedex complimintary shipping from home to dryage. Is this correct? Do we have to pay MCS to move the robot from dryage to regional? Why do they need our credit card on pre-pay? <---(MCS) It looks like FIRST will pay for the drayage for ONE CRATE 6.7.10 (rules). After we are done, what happens next? Say if we want the robot to come home...Do we have to pay MSC for drayage from regional to fedex? Or does fedex come and get it from regional and ship it home? Do we have to worry about paying MCS after the regional to get our crate home? Sorry..confused will all the handling and who is doing what... |
Re: FEDEX Shipping and Dryage Questions
I'm also very concerned about this issue and have some of the same questions. Frankly our team doesn't have a credit card and I'm not too comfortable giving someone my credit card number when my email sorts their email into my spam box because it thinks the address is questionable. I would also appreciate it if someone would answer this.
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Re: FEDEX Shipping and Dryage Questions
No payment should be required to move the robot from the drayage warehouse where it is shipped to, then to the competition site and vice versa when the competition is done.
Unless you are shipping to back to back regionals, then you have to pay for warehouse movement and to use the MCS shipper because FedEx does NOT pick up on Saturdays. Quote:
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Re: FEDEX Shipping and Dryage Questions
So then:
If our ONE crate is under 400LBS Then HOME ---> FEDEX = FREE$$ FEDEX --> Drayage (MCS) = FREE$$ Drayage (MCS) -> First Regional = FREE$$ If we go home after first regional: First Regional -> Drayage (MCS) = FREE$$ Drayage (MCS) -----> FEDEX = FREE$$ FEDEX -------> HOME = FREE$$ Do this sound correct? Quote:
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Re: FEDEX Shipping and Dryage Questions
Absolutely correct, However, remember all the rules about the robot and how it must be shipped. The batteries and secure position of the bot such forth and such forth....
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Re: FEDEX Shipping and Dryage Questions
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Re: FEDEX Shipping and Dryage Questions
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1) Keep the robot crate (with the robot and essentials) under the 400 lb limit to avoid extra drayage charges (this is hard to do, since a sturdy plywood crate can weight 200 lbs by itself. Drayage will charge somewhere from $44 - $60 per hundred pounds (check your "Site Info" pdf document for the regional you're going to) over the 400 lb. And yes, 401 lbs is charged the same as 500 lb. Keep the crate uder 600 lb if you want to use FedEx donated shipping. 2) You cannot use the FedEx donated shipping between events that are back to back. If you use the MCS designated shipper - it may cost you $500 or more depending on the crates weight. I've been caught off guard twice by this and it's not fun if you haven't budgeted for it. I'd rely on FedEx to get your crate to your first event and back home from your last event. In previous year's I thought I could use it in between events if I personally dropped it off to the drayage site for the first event - I was wrong and had to pay for the MCS shipping. MCS may also charge you extra to have the crate taken back to the warehouse to await a FedEx pickup - just read the "Site Info" pdf closely! |
Re: FEDEX Shipping and Dryage Questions
You may know this, but once you ship your robot it will be shipped from event to event, it will never go back to your base (ie. classroom) until you are done with all of your competitions. I just wanted to make that clear from reading the prior posts.
Is MSC the guy at each event that coordinates the movement of the crates to and from your pit and taking it off the delivery truck and putting it back on the shipping truck, or is MSC a shipping company? |
Re: FEDEX Shipping and Dryage Questions
May find the 3rd bulleted item of interest MSC has found another way to make an extra dollar :(
From Site Info 12.6.2 Crate Rates Use the Midwest Conference Service drayage calculator. Go to http://www.mcsexpo.com/ and click on the FIRST logo for direction to the calculator page. If crates fall outside parameters, the team is responsible for the overage rates. Midwest Conference Service rounds up to the nearest hundred pounds. • The overweight crate rate is $56.00 per hundredweight over 400 pounds. • The rate for an extra crate is $56.00 per hundredweight. • There is a $27 per hundredweight charge to haul FedEx shipments back to the warehouse to ship out on Monday. The MCS carriers do not go back to the warehouse. |
Re: Shipping crate (how to build?)
Crate questions:
1) Does a typical crate really need to be made out of 1/2" full plywood sheets? 2) Can a crate be made of 1/4" luan plywood that is bounded by 1x3 strips on all edges? 3) Is there anything special you do to your crate to make it serve "double duty" at the event(s) such as a table, display, etc? 4) The bottom is a forklift skid. Instead of using 4"x4" runners, has anyone simply taken a standard wood/plastic pallet and used that as their "base" of the shipping crate? |
Re: FEDEX Shipping and Dryage Questions
I want to know where to find the address forms you tape to the crate when you ship it...
And don't you have to send in the shipping invoice to FIRST by the next day (or something)? Sorry, I'm completely clueless, but I'm in charge of it! |
Re: FEDEX Shipping and Dryage Questions
[quote=Alaina]I want to know where to find the address forms you tape to the crate when you ship it...
Go to the 'Site Info' for the regional and the shipping labels are on the last page. If you read through the shipping information in the manual and under 'Site Info' you should have most of the stuff you need to kinow. |
Re: FEDEX Shipping and Dryage Questions
WE built our crate out of 3/4" ply sheets and 2x4 with a slotted cut in it for the ply. It is a 4panel crate, nice and solid. We use it to transport our robot back and forth between school and our worksite. Do we need to put skids on the bottom for a forklift? Is anyone else's crate exactly 38x28x60 inside.
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Re: FEDEX Shipping and Dryage Questions
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6.3.1 Crate Specifications All Crates must: • Weigh 400 pounds or less in order to avoid drayage overage charges • Be sturdily built to prevent damage to your equipment • "Sit" on 2 pieces of 4" by 4" lumber, spaced at least 28" apart so it can be moved by a forklift. • Have a footprint no greater than 4’ by 4’ and be no taller than 5’10" (70") high. This maximum includes the 4" by 4" lumber mentioned above. • Be capable of being moved by a forklift |
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