I'm putting this under rural living because I know a lot of people have to mail order stuff which is not carried locally.
I needed about 30 U-bolts like:National Hardware #677-3/8 in. x 4 in. x 7 in. Zinc-Plated U Bolt Plate with Hex Nut-2192BC 677 SQ U BOLT ZN at The Home Depot
Local stores didn't have them. Home depot couldn't promise delivery before the 28th. McMaster Carr (MC) said tomorrow (which has become today), which works for me. They were $3.86 at MC vs $3.60 w/ free shipping at HD. I could live with that. MC estimated shipping charges as $7
in an email.
I get the bill today and shipping charges are $10.48.
I know the difference isn't BIG but for those who use it how accurate or exorbitant are their shipping charges?
I'd like to order more "stuff" from them but if their shipping estimates are off by 50% I want to be able to take that into account.
,,,,,,,,Nice to know they rip you off on shipping. Yes, it is only $3 but they should know exactly what it will be for ahipping. They are padding their profit with shipping charges. Thanks for making the rest of us aware of their scam.
Ditto.This is why they were slow in dealing with the public.
I don't think they "ripped me off" I was just surprised at the 50% difference. If they had quoted me in email $50 and then charged me $75 I would be complaining to them also. Based on the responses here from people that actually write that they deal with MC it seems the variation may be on the high side percentage wise but their shipping costs are usually not exorbitant.Nice to know they rip you off on shipping. Yes, it is only $3 but they should know exactly what it will be for ahipping. They are padding their profit with shipping charges. Thanks for making the rest of us aware of their scam.
You would never find them off by so large a $ figure. There are small small variances in box size and packaging incorporated to deal with concentrated mass that are at the discretion of the individual packer. Shipping costs tend to go up in increments -not by the penny. $3 more on a heavy dense order where the box may fracture and lose pieces is a bargain both sides. The overhead on lost pieces is huge. MC would just replenish PP w/o question.I don't think they "ripped me off" I was just surprised at the 50% difference. If they had quoted me in email $50 and then charged me $75 I would be complaining to them also. Based on the responses here from people that actually write that they deal with MC it seems the variation may be on the high side percentage wise but their shipping costs are usually not exorbitant.
It's still frustrating that they don't have a shipping cost cost calculator on their site.
Nice to know they rip you off on shipping. Yes, it is only $3 but they should know exactly what it will be for ahipping. They are padding their profit with shipping charges. Thanks for making the rest of us aware of their scam.
Seriously? Any company that ships product and doesn't make a profit on shipping is losing money. Those packages do not get sent by the warehouse fairy, someone has to pull, package securely and arrange shipping. It doesn't magically get sent to you, unless you live in a dreamland. Everything has a value associated with it, that value varies from one person to the next.
As for the cost of the OP's package being higher, I can assure you it cost more in time and gas than $3.48 to get it elsewhere.
Really. I suspect you are considering companies that have a few products as opposed to a million.I agree with this, and with all the endorsements of McMaster-Carr's quality as a vendor. But is this really the point? The vendor is in the best position to know what the shipping will be on online orders for its products, regardless of how they calculate it and who they use to ship. Low-balling it by 50% should surprise anyone, IMO.