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Joined
Nov 2, 2022
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Location
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General question. How are you sellers packaging long guns to ship to buyers, and what approximately is it costing to ship long guns right now. I have a couple I'd like to sell, but want to know what I'm getting into. Thanks
 
I build a box from 1x4s(or cut down 1.6s for more room) and luan paneling. About $25-35 or so for the box parts. Inside packing is whatever I can scrounge up to stop movement. Shipping is USPS Priority approx. $150 and $200 depending on insurance. UPS is about the same. I've never had the opportunity to use Fedex. The USPS uses Fedex and UPS for shipping between cities.
 
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Bubble wrap your rifle really well. Place it in a heavy duty 4"x8" dedicated rifle box. Pack filler material around the rifle. These rifle boxes are available from U-Line. 15 boxes to a bundle.

I've never had so much as a single problem shipping this way.

Seems like 40 to 60 bucks is the going shipping rate these days.
 
1" x 4" frame, 6' long, rifle sandwiched between plastic sheets, spray foam insulation all around so NOTHING moves. :cool: Split box that fits over 1"X 4" frame. Again, NOTHING moves. From Ohio builder to California, USPS First Class Insured for about $2K , just at $120.00. Shipped it back East to buyer for just at the same price. Not a mark on it. :thumb::thumb: Heavy but well worth the $$$ to protect it and guarantee safe delivery. Tracked all the way. Was held at our Rural PO for pick up. :D :D
 
I have shipped several with a couple different packings. One, that worked well, was a $10.00 hard rifle case bought from Walmart. It padlocked closed and I mailed the key separately to the buyer. Since so many of our guns are really-really long, I have used two regular rifle shipping boxes heavily taped together. I got some of them from a local, and friendly, gun shop for free. Two of the guns I shipped were smooth bores and I used the wads for packing material. Works, but, I'm sure, very messy when opened.
 
I make my boxes out of 1/4 plywood, pack the guns in bubble wrap, and label them as precision pipe.
 
My flintlock was packed really well, double boxed, reinforcing wood cling-wrapped to it, took half an hour to unwrap, cost $83.
My 1861 "springfield" was single boxed, barely any packing materials, only cost $37 to ship, but it was also within the same state.
Both this year.
 
I have used round “SonoTube” concrete form tubes in the past.
They work quite well, are stronger than you think and cheaper/faster than crating them.
Cut wood plug ends and screw them in place.
 
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