I bought some of those little white mailers as shown in the original thread. Went to the post office. Guy says "it's a package" I said, it fits through the slot, he says "It won't bend", I say, send it as non-machinable... he says what's that? After something like Who's on First, he finally said, OK I'll ship it first class, but if the machine breaks your poker chip, that's on you.
$1.20 for one chip in a small white mailer. Last time I used a bubble pack it was over the usual $3.99 that people charge.
Can anyone please make sense of this for me? No I don't want to put a Forever stamp on and try to sneak one past. I just want to know, for one casino chip, in a piece of protective paper, in a greeting card size envelope, which is standard first class, can I just put on a first class and a non-machinable 17c surcharge additional stamp.
"The $0.17 nonmachinable surcharge applies to all First-Class Mail letters weighing up to the maximum weight of 3.5 ounces, with one or more nonmachinable characteristics. The aspect ratio (length divided by height) is less than 1.3 or more than 2.5." https://faq.usps.com/s/article/What-is-the-Non-Machinable-Surcharge-for-First-Class-Mail
I figure this covered it. "It is too rigid or contains items such as pens, keys or coins that cause the thickness of the mailpiece to be uneven"
So I should have paid maybe .58 + .17 = .75? But for .90 oz I was charged $1.20 which is a mystery? According to a search on the USPS site - Flat/Large Envelope - 1 oz. $1.16 which is OK if I know in advance. (or would it be $1.33?)
"If approved by the Postal Regulatory Commission, the temporary rate increases would go into effect at 12:00 a.m., Central Time, on Oct. 2, 2022, and remain in place until 12:00 a.m., Central Time, Jan. 22, 2023. International shipments will not be impacted. "
Is there a first class holiday surcharge for a 1oz envelope. If I read the page right: https://www.shipstation.com/blog/2022-usps-holiday-surcharge/ Zone 1 and if surcharge, then I should have paid .75 + .25 = $1.00 Or would it be $1.16 plus the .25 for $1.41?
The receipt by the way is marked "Large Envelope Weight 0-.90 oz"
My eventual goal is to know what the right postage is for 1-2-3-4-5 chips so I don't have to drive to the USPS offices and go through the mystery of what's the postage? @ 5 chips that's 3 oz and starts to be as much as a small envelop can safely hold.
Anyone know the answer? Does the USPS know the answer?
|