12-31-2018 06:10 PM
Where is the best place to put the postage label on the above size package so the poat office does not screw it up
12-31-2018 06:14 PM
Doesn't matter.
12-31-2018 06:30 PM
You're asking the question because you know that a box 2 inches wide isn't a good idea. Why not put it in a wider package so there's plenty of room for the label?
12-31-2018 06:41 PM
That almost sounds like a tube or triangle type of package. Put the label so that when it is rolled the address can be seen. Not so they have to stand the package upright to see the address and bar code because the will still have to roll it while sticking 77" up in the air. Told to me by USPS rep. I sent a piece of trim that was long and flat and I put it in a tube.
12-31-2018 06:45 PM
print a small label, and place it so that the bar code is not going around a corner
12-31-2018 06:45 PM
Sorry just saw you said it was square. Same concept though. Make it so they can read it when it is horiz. Versus Vert.
12-31-2018 06:58 PM
Technically you can't. Labels are supposed to fit on a face of the package without wrapping around and edge.
In practice, you can probably get away with wrapping it long way around near one end (a foot from the end or more), making sure to not have any of the barcode on an edge and the destination address also not on an edge. Scanning equipment along the way only needs to read the barcode, and humans need to read the delivery address the last mile.
Something like this where the red lines are the pkg edges it is folded around:
Try not to place the Retail Distribution Code (RDC) or the Carrier Route number (CRT) on an edge either - they are used by humans for origin and destination PO sorting (RDC is the 0000 and CRT is the C019 in the label above)
I'd cover the label with clear tape (if you don't already) since there is going to be stuff near and on edges, and edges will rub on things and may tend to scrub off the print more than on a flat surface.
01-01-2019 08:00 AM
I have been shrinking my labels to fit my small boxes for years. If you have a printer that shrinks the label by percentages, you can do a 60% label to fit on a small box. I have Never had a problem with shrinking my labels. The Clerks at the Post Office love them because everything is right there on the top of the box, with no wrapping it around the box, which they don't like. As long as you have a good printer and the bar code is not covered with tape, you shouldn't have a problem.
01-01-2019 08:18 AM
I always cover the bar code with tape.
01-01-2019 08:36 AM
01-01-2019 09:10 AM - edited 01-01-2019 09:11 AM
I have had them scanned at the PO and by my carrier up to 50% and I have never ever had a problem. The PO has gotten new scanners in the last year or so.
01-01-2019 10:16 AM
01-04-2019 02:17 PM
It is the staff of a ceromonial spear. if I box the shaft to the size of a label the shipping cost goes from less than 10 to more than 30!!! Good enough reason for me
01-04-2019 02:28 PM - edited 01-04-2019 02:32 PM
The length-plus-girth of your original box is 85 inches, which is already above the limit for paying the regular postage rate. If you are shipping via Priority Mail to Zones 1 - 4, or via Parcel Select Ground or Retail Ground to any Zone, you will hvae to pay the 'balloon" rate, which is the sme as the zoned postage cost for 20 pounds.
On the other hand, if you are shipping via Priority Mail to Zones 5 - 9, then the surcharge is called a "dimensional weight" and it is applied to package with a volume over 1 cubic foot (1728 cubic inches). Dividing 1728 by the 77-inch length of your box gives us 22 inches, so you could pack your item in a box that's 77 by 2 by 11 inches (77 x 2 x 11 = 1694).
So either way (via Priroity or pParcel Select, regardless of Zone), you're paying the same postage cost whether your box is 2 inches wide or 11 inches wide.
01-04-2019 02:41 PM
@drusalina wrote:I have been shrinking my labels to fit my small boxes for years. If you have a printer that shrinks the label by percentages, you can do a 60% label to fit on a small box. I have Never had a problem with shrinking my labels. The Clerks at the Post Office love them because everything is right there on the top of the box, with no wrapping it around the box, which they don't like. As long as you have a good printer and the bar code is not covered with tape, you shouldn't have a problem.
Unless you are sending everything to PO Boxes, the clerks aren't the ones who matter. Ask the carriers who have to try to read those miniature addresses. This time of year sometimes in the dark. Or sitting in a vehicle halfway in the travel lane at a mailbox on a highway with traffic wizzing by at 60 miles an hour. Maybe in the dark.
If you don't have a 4x6 inch area at least on one side of your package to fit the entire unshrunk label, get a bigger box or put it in an envelope with bigger surface area. Shrinking labels down to tiny dimensions is not as great a solution as you might think.