Maybe back in the day when everything was paper driven and you didn’t know your load until it was weighed on the dock. Now nearly every box has physical dimensions and weight upon being dropped off, that “unexpected” package volume has to be exceedingly rare.
That makes a lot of sense. I always wondered what they did if a plane gets grounded for a mx issue or something.Last I knew it was true. As Brad said, they are called sweep or swing flights. Aircraft that are only lightly loaded are given a routing that "sweeps" across the country and are able to land and pick up overflow or replace a grounded flight. The justification is the cost of the extra flight or two is offset by the potential loss of business for failing to deliver guaranteed overnight parcels. All the major logistics carriers have used it over the years.
@Sluggo63
Also, that’s a metric crap ton of benjamin bonfires going on by the minute. There likely wasn’t that much on demand opps ever. Not to mention you don’t just rando a wide body into an old airport.
They are purely flying for chem-trail purposes.
With Mothers Day coming up, I wonder if you can have a chemtrail named after someone like you can for starsThey are purely flying for chem-trail purposes.
With Mothers Day coming up, I wonder if you can have a chemtrail named after someone like you can for stars
Despite what many consumers might think, making the mission on overnight packages is taken quite seriously.
I'm gonna defend them. In my area USPS is a little better than UPS and both are dramatically better than fedex. Fedex consistently fails to find our house (e.g. yesterday) or delivers to the wrong house (e.g. two weeks ago). USPS is wired into some sort of notifications system so my Alexa pings me when a package is delivered to the curb (always wrapped in a sealed plastic bag when weather demands) and is predictable. UPS is great, mostly on time and delivers to my door, instead of the curb. And it's generally the same 3-4 guys. One of them likes to talk about my plane parked in the yard. One of the other ones brings dog treats and, of course, asked first before treating the dogs.Meanwhile, the USPS has unmarked cars driving around to hijack their own trucks anytime the driver seems to be at risk of achieving a delivery commitment by mistake.
Wow I thought all those were long out of service. They replaced the ones in my pop. 600 town in about 1987. I've got one around here....somewhere.I'm gonna defend them. In my area USPS is a little better than UPS and both are dramatically better than fedex. Fedex consistently fails to find our house (e.g. yesterday) or delivers to the wrong house (e.g. two weeks ago). USPS is wired into some sort of notifications system so my Alexa pings me when a package is delivered to the curb (always wrapped in a sealed plastic bag when weather demands) and is predictable. UPS is great, mostly on time and delivers to my door, instead of the curb. And it's generally the same 3-4 guys. One of them likes to talk about my plane parked in the yard. One of the other ones brings dog treats and, of course, asked first before treating the dogs.
Anyway, USPS FTW. Then UPS. Then Fedex.
I'm sure different areas have different successes.
Also, I like our somewhat old post office. So there's that. Here's our PO boxes...
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It's absolutely a thing. But what would I know about sending a thousand pounds of material out on FedEx every so often when it routinely goes on a truck. I've only been doing this 27 years. Have that happen to a handful of companies on the same day out of the same service center and you're scrambling."Unexpected package volume"? No such thing. They know where the packages are. Efficiency in this business is anticipating the demand with high accuracy and then optimizing the infrastructure accordingly. It's not expecting the unexpected.
- Martin
"Unexpected package volume"? No such thing.
- Martin
Sounds like nonsense. Surely they'd just have them parked in strategic locations ready to go, if anything.
Like @Brad Z said. It's mostly true. They are called "Sweep Flights" and are designated as such in the bidpack. If you are on a designated Sweep Flight, you are expected to fly the flight planned route, and not take any directs. They are flown in a circuitous route to cover airports where there is high priority freight that can't be left behind in cast of a down airplane.I would highly doubt it,it’s all about the money.
Maybe back in the day when everything was paper driven and you didn’t know your load until it was weighed on the dock. Now nearly every box has physical dimensions and weight upon being dropped off, that “unexpected” package volume has to be exceedingly rare.
@Sluggo63
Also, that’s a metric crap ton of benjamin bonfires going on by the minute. There likely wasn’t that much on demand opps ever. Not to mention you don’t just rando a wide body into an old airport.
Unexpected volume is more common that you think. It happens. A large supplier gets a big, last minute order and rushes it to the local ramp. That stuff gets put on a plane. I've had more than a handful of times where a ramp agent comes up and says "we're adding another 10,000 pounds of freight we just got... how much more gas do you want?""Unexpected package volume"? No such thing. They know where the packages are. Efficiency in this business is anticipating the demand with high accuracy and then optimizing the infrastructure accordingly. It's not expecting the unexpected.
- Martin
This is changing. Back in the day, a FedEx Express package would never see the inside of a FedEx Ground truck, or vice versa. Now the operating companies are merging the streams so packages will flow between the two to be more efficient.One of the things I find fascinating about FedEx is the apparently total separation of different services. Last week I had two identical fedex trucks deliver packages to my house within 15min. of each other, one shipped via their ground service, one air.
This is changing. Back in the day, a FedEx Express package would never see the inside of a FedEx Ground truck, or vice versa. Now the operating companies are merging the streams so packages will flow between the two to be more efficient.
I won't get into what I think about that... I just get paid to drive the bus.
But USPS doesn't deliver outside the city limits, so everyone has to have a PO box,
You are right.Federal service, so it can’t be a states differences thing.
Maybe it’s in here:You are right.
We didn't get home delivery in Alaska villages either, but that is really rural. And we didn't pay to have a PO box.
I'll ask the PO here again why no delivery outside the city limit, think I'll get an answer besides ''We don't know''.??
Our USPS office only does delivery outside city limits, unless you're a large development with a centralized mailbox. Inside city limits, they generally refuse to do mail delivery to street addresses. If you send a mail article to my company's street address, which hasn't changed in 40 years, they will return it undeliverable. They also stopped putting notices of certified mail into PO boxes, so you have to take the tracking number to the counter to ask if your certified mail has arrived. One time, they locked my PO box because they hadn't received my payment, which happened because I mailed it to them and they lost it. I won't even start on business mail like original documents they lost just in time for the person signing them to die and be unable to sign a replacement, or the times they have returned mail to my PO box as "undeliverable as addressed." I don't know how much more core mission it gets for the USPS than putting an envelope with a PO box address on it into the corresponding box.Lately here in NM, USPS has been the most dependable and affordable. But USPS doesn't deliver outside the city limits, so everyone has to have a PO box, which seems to be going up in price every year.
You’re welcome!Fedex seems to be monitoring this thread. About 25 minutes after my complaint above they showed up with the package they were unable to deliver properly yesterday.
That's one of the reasons FedEx used 727s as long as they did. They weren't so concerned about fuel and labor costs as much as dispatch-ability. The 727 was nice for certain terrain constrained airports because its one engine inoperative performance meant it could carry more payload than the equivalent twin cargo aircraft. Its no surprise the only airlines using 747s these days are cargo carriers.Back to the topic of the thread, though, I had a nice conversation with a FedEx A&P a few years ago. He was telling me about how these companies make fleet decisions in large part based on keeping those delivery commitments. For example, if you can go direct from Memphis to Tokyo without stopping at Anchorage, you can leave Memphis later in the day and still be next-day in Tokyo. I think that the overall logistics and decision making at these companies are fascinating subjects. And not only because I wrote a detailed paper on Hadley v. Baxendale one time many years ago.
Mine likes to put only heavy packages right up against the gate that swings outward. So that there's no way to get out to get it. As you say, light packages get thrown over the fence.USPS is pretty indefensible around here.
We have a gated driveway and we prefer not to have people enter unannounced, due to a large dog and a horse that are frequently roaming about. For deliveries, I placed a 4-wheel cart by the fence next to the gate with a sign over it: "Please leave all deliveries in cart."
So around Christmas time, when I ordered a set of Christmas glassware for Mrs. Fast, how did USPS make the delivery? No, not into the very obvious cart under the sign, nor did they leave it on the ground next to the cart. No, they dropped the box (marked fragile, of course) over the fence onto the ground on the other side.
Fortunately none of the glasses were broken, but I continue to be astounded by the incompetence (and apparent inability to read) of our postal workers.
I could share many other tales, but I don't want to elevate my blood pressure.
Meanwhile, the USPS has unmarked cars driving around to hijack their own trucks anytime the driver seems to be at risk of achieving a delivery commitment by mistake.
Yeef.!! Maybe I should be happy to only drive 4.3 miles to the post office twice a week.Our USPS office only does delivery outside city limits, unless you're a large development with a centralized mailbox. Inside city limits, they generally refuse to do mail delivery to street addresses. If you send a mail article to my company's street address, which hasn't changed in 40 years, they will return it undeliverable. They also stopped putting notices of certified mail into PO boxes, so you have to take the tracking number to the counter to ask if your certified mail has arrived. One time, they locked my PO box because they hadn't received my payment, which happened because I mailed it to them and they lost it. I won't even start on business mail like original documents they lost just in time for the person signing them to die and be unable to sign a replacement, or the times they have returned mail to my PO box as "undeliverable as addressed." I don't know how much more core mission it gets for the USPS than putting an envelope with a PO box address on it into the corresponding box.
The worst recent one was when I was waiting in line for 45 minutes on Saturday to get the package that Informed Delivery said was to be delivered on Monday (but, when I waited in line 45 minutes on Monday, they said they had no idea where it was and couldn't contact the distribution/sorting center because their relationship had gotten too bad for the center to take their calls). A woman ahead of me in line waited about an hour to ask where they had dumped her wedding dress. It was clear that her wedding was rapidly approaching but she kept her cool. Their best guess was that it was out with a rural carrier to stuff into her roadside mailbox. I told her not to worry, though. They probably lost her invitations, too, so nobody would be there to see if her dress had been lost or damaged.
All of the major delivery services have done something I hate over the years. UPS destroyed a package I had sent to myself with insurance. The insurance amounted to them sending it back to my former address and dumping the broken contents there. FedEx ran over a computer motherboard I was returning to Newegg and then charged me to use a fax machine in a Fedex store to file a claim, which they then ignored. I don't recall the details of my DHL bad experience but I know I had one out of the one time I ever used them, which is pretty bad odds. But USPS is the worst. Locally, UPS is the best because they use their own trucks for final delivery. FedEx (other than the highest end services) contracts out so you'll get random rented box trucks showing up to deliver a package at the wrong address.
Back to the topic of the thread, though, I had a nice conversation with a FedEx A&P a few years ago. He was telling me about how these companies make fleet decisions in large part based on keeping those delivery commitments. For example, if you can go direct from Memphis to Tokyo without stopping at Anchorage, you can leave Memphis later in the day and still be next-day in Tokyo. I think that the overall logistics and decision making at these companies are fascinating subjects. And not only because I wrote a detailed paper on Hadley v. Baxendale one time many years ago.
One time, they locked my PO box because they hadn't received my payment, which happened because I mailed it to them and they lost it.
After he retired we have a multi-year run of different people. A couple were ok, but several were absolutely terrible.