Shipping a 4003
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- DriftSpace
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Shipping a 4003
I have need to ship my newly-acquired 4003 to a certain someone in San Francisco, but I wanted to get some advice on how to do that properly.
The plan as it stands now is to go to a local RIC dealer to ask if they have any 4003 shipping boxes hanging around in the back, and to use one of those. I was planning to ship it inside the case, of course. There's a chance that the shop won't have a shipping box, and if that happens I'm not sure what to do; maybe just go to a Guitar Center or something to see if they have a bass case box...
Does anyone have any experience with shipping a 4003, and does anyone have any advice based upon that experience?
Thank you!
The plan as it stands now is to go to a local RIC dealer to ask if they have any 4003 shipping boxes hanging around in the back, and to use one of those. I was planning to ship it inside the case, of course. There's a chance that the shop won't have a shipping box, and if that happens I'm not sure what to do; maybe just go to a Guitar Center or something to see if they have a bass case box...
Does anyone have any experience with shipping a 4003, and does anyone have any advice based upon that experience?
Thank you!
- qwezirider
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Re: Shipping a 4003
I've shipped several, as well as other basses and guitars. I use these boxes: http://www.uline.com/Product/Detail/S-4 ... itar-Boxes
Filled with styrofoam worms on both ends and all sides, I've never had one go bad. Even to Australia a couple times and Europe once. The only drawback is they come in a minimum pack of five, but it's worth it to me.
Filled with styrofoam worms on both ends and all sides, I've never had one go bad. Even to Australia a couple times and Europe once. The only drawback is they come in a minimum pack of five, but it's worth it to me.
- DriftSpace
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Re: Shipping a 4003
Thanks a lot for relaying your experience, Bruce.
My local RIC dealer just gave me a factory 4000 box for shipping, so all I need now are some peanuts or bubble wrap and we'll be good to go.
My local RIC dealer just gave me a factory 4000 box for shipping, so all I need now are some peanuts or bubble wrap and we'll be good to go.
Re: Shipping a 4003
Make sure you support the guitar inside the case with bubble wrap or something so it doesn't move around inside.
...Dean
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Never, ever drool on your surf shirt. It wrecks the solo.
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Re: Shipping a 4003
I always slack the strings of any instrument I ship, which cuts down on warping during the inevitable temperature shifts during transit.
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ricnbacker
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Re: Shipping a 4003
I just got a 4004 that was sent in a box with the shipping carton from Ric in Cali. no peanuts , no bubble wrap and came through just fine from what I can tell.
OHSC, cardboard box with cardboard braces, inside another cardboard box.
personally I would have added paper, Styrofoam, bubble wrap etc.....
OHSC, cardboard box with cardboard braces, inside another cardboard box.
personally I would have added paper, Styrofoam, bubble wrap etc.....
Re: Shipping a 4003
Rics should be shipped with strings under tension. Page 7 in the manual under "General Guitar Care."BobHyde wrote:I always slack the strings of any instrument I ship, which cuts down on warping during the inevitable temperature shifts during transit.
Re: Shipping a 4003
Hmm, good to know. Last time I shipped with FedEx, they refused to insure unless the strings on my bass were slacked.badeggs wrote:Rics should be shipped with strings under tension. Page 7 in the manual under "General Guitar Care."BobHyde wrote:I always slack the strings of any instrument I ship, which cuts down on warping during the inevitable temperature shifts during transit.
- rickenbrother
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Re: Shipping a 4003
Airlines will also tell you to loosen the strings if you travel with a guitar. Don't listen to them.BobHyde wrote:Hmm, good to know. Last time I shipped with FedEx, they refused to insure unless the strings on my bass were slacked.badeggs wrote:Rics should be shipped with strings under tension. Page 7 in the manual under "General Guitar Care."BobHyde wrote:I always slack the strings of any instrument I ship, which cuts down on warping during the inevitable temperature shifts during transit.
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Re: Shipping a 4003
Pardon my ignorance, but how would they even know specifically to inquire about that detail? It just seems weird...BobHyde wrote:Last time I shipped with FedEx, they refused to insure unless the strings on my bass were slacked.
Personally I can't stand FedEx because they'll change your delivery date like five times before you get something from them, so I use UPS. But they never asked about string tension or anything else beyond what it is and where it's going. And insurance is no problem.
Re: Shipping a 4003
There is a binder/book thing that the FedEx person referenced when I brought in the bass for shipment. It was a vintage T-bird, so I'm guessing the questioning was prompted by the number of zeros attached to the declared value.badeggs wrote:Pardon my ignorance, but how would they even know specifically to inquire about that detail? It just seems weird...BobHyde wrote:Last time I shipped with FedEx, they refused to insure unless the strings on my bass were slacked.
Personally I can't stand FedEx because they'll change your delivery date like five times before you get something from them, so I use UPS. But they never asked about string tension or anything else beyond what it is and where it's going. And insurance is no problem.
Personally, I don't like either FedEx or UPS. I prefer personal delivery/pickup!! The only way to guarantee there's no issue!
- DriftSpace
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Re: Shipping a 4003
Too late for all this stuff, but thanks anyway; I sent it this afternoon, and only the bubble-wrap-inside-the-case-post happened before that. I unfortunately did not check this board before then, because I figured after 2 days Bruce was the only person who would respond.
It didn't have any strings on it because I removed the 5-screw tailpiece to be replaced with a 7-screw, and I figured since Paul was going to disassemble the thing anyway I would just leave the strings and tail off to make his job slightly easier.
The fellow at my local RIC dealer told me they ship -- just as Christopher said -- in the case, with extra cardboard (or anther box) between the case and the box. I used bubble wrap instead of extra cardboard to pad the gap, but otherwise it was just a 4003 in a case inside a factory RIC box.
UPS did not enquire about the string tension.
I guess the positive side of this is that it's going to Paul, and if I've done my research correctly it seems like it will come back to me in factory/like-new condition (or better) regardless of how it arrives in his shop.
Thanks again to everyone for contributing.
It didn't have any strings on it because I removed the 5-screw tailpiece to be replaced with a 7-screw, and I figured since Paul was going to disassemble the thing anyway I would just leave the strings and tail off to make his job slightly easier.
The fellow at my local RIC dealer told me they ship -- just as Christopher said -- in the case, with extra cardboard (or anther box) between the case and the box. I used bubble wrap instead of extra cardboard to pad the gap, but otherwise it was just a 4003 in a case inside a factory RIC box.
UPS did not enquire about the string tension.
I guess the positive side of this is that it's going to Paul, and if I've done my research correctly it seems like it will come back to me in factory/like-new condition (or better) regardless of how it arrives in his shop.
Thanks again to everyone for contributing.
Re: Shipping a 4003
Did you loosen the truss rods, too?DriftSpace wrote:It didn't have any strings on it because I removed the 5-screw tailpiece to be replaced with a 7-screw, and I figured since Paul was going to disassemble the thing anyway I would just leave the strings and tail off to make his job slightly easier.
- DriftSpace
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Re: Shipping a 4003
Not intentionally, but after I bought the thing and had a peek beneath the TRC I noticed the nuts were so loose I could have practically turned them by hand.
- qwezirider
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Re: Shipping a 4003
And if all goes horribly wrong in shipping, it'll be in the right hands for the repair.DriftSpace wrote:I guess the positive side of this is that it's going to Paul, ...
