Gerry wrote:Few weeks back I bought a hammer on E-bay, shipped from KY, I live in southeast GA. It took almost 6 weeks to get here it went to San Juan, PR then Miami, FL then Orlando, Jacksonville, FL to me. If I mail my parts payments to RBI and Gardner to Atlanta I mail 6 days prior to due date and often it takes 18 or 20 days for them to be posted. Dont know where the holdup is but dont think its the posters.
If it going to take that long then my $1000 credit limit isn't going do me any good. And why in the heck can't Gardner accept electronic checks. If RBI can then Gardner should be able to do the same thru Codis.
I know the check I mail Monday to Gardner thru my bank made to Atlanta Thursday per the bank's tracking.
Gerry I would suggest you try the electronic check payment to pay RBI. But you will the account name, R&T (routing and transit), and account numbers. The only problem I ran into is if I have a credit larger than the amount due then I got to call to have that applied but that is fairly easy once you get pass the customer service personnel.
Beside Gardner only lost half my business orders last year because they took 7 months to switch over from CC and now with these kind of delays the order level will remain small. It like cutting off their nose to sprite their face.
For this reason I might be better off just to place orders thru RBI whenever I can; although, the free ship level when to $225.00. At least payment gets processed in a few days freeing my credit line.
RoyM wrote:It isn't called snail mail for nothing, Canada Post is no better. I ordered a package that was shipped USPS from L.A., it then worked it's way through customs and forwarded to CP for delivery. SIX WEEKS!!
Another arrived at my door from Denver via FEDEX in three days. The whole postal system needs to go on a diet, it is bloated and inefficient.
And Roy it is on a diet on my part as I refuse to use it; unless, absolutely necessary due their poor service. Their 3 Day priority service is a joke.
The truest measure of society is the how it treats its elderly, its pets, and its prisoners.