Amazon delivery

From: william (WILLIAMA)26 Jun 2019 08:15
To: ALL1 of 14
Ordered some stuff from Amazon UK on Monday, for next day delivery which as is sometimes the case became Wednesday on the payment/delivery page whereas it had been Tuesday on the order page. This was a mid-day order so I had assumed Tuesday was reasonable when "next day" was specified. 

I'm not especially concerned, the package isn't urgent (just some little brass feet to stop the speaker stand spikes making holes in the bamboo floor) but I am curious now.The fistful of emails still insist it's arriving today by 9:00 PM but tracking says that it departed Lonate Pozzolo, VA IT at 05:30 this morning. Lonate Pozzolo is literally metres from Malpensa airport so I'm not sure whether it actually left Italy at 05:30, or left an Amazon/Vendor facility at that time. In any case it then has to travel to a UK airport, be unloaded and sorted to travel on to a UK Amazon facility and from there to the local distribution hub down the road from me, where it will be loaded onto a van before being thrown into my neighbour's garden delivered. (That's mean. I have some respect for the Amazon delivery people who are usually very friendly in spite of the shitty pay, long hours and pressure to deliver).

So much for deliberately picking a UK company with a BRITISH (in capitals) product to avoid the month long delay from China - even though it's so much cheaper to have stuff like this made by political prisoners. I wonder if it will arrive today. 
From: graphitone26 Jun 2019 08:52
To: william (WILLIAMA) 2 of 14
I've fallen foul of their next day delivery thing before - it's next day delivery /after/ dispatch. Which could be 3 weeks from when I've put the order through.

Once you've got the notification though telling you it's getting delivered on a particular day, then that is usually the case. In my own experiences they've been 100% accurate.

 
From: CHYRON (DSMITHHFX)26 Jun 2019 09:32
To: william (WILLIAMA) 3 of 14
I'm always amazed when tracking packages by the circuitous routes and time-consuming warehousing and sorting measures taken, that anything can get delivered inside of 3-weeks.
From: william (WILLIAMA)26 Jun 2019 10:59
To: ALL4 of 14
WooHoo!

Checked in at Castle Donington, UK and departed the facility at 09:17.

That's in Leicestershire, bang on the doorstep of East Midlands Airport - so I assume that's where it landed. That's 178 miles away and realistically a 4 hour road trip away from the local Amazon depot (and about the same if they deliver straight to me which is unlikely). So will probably arrive locally early afternoon.

Now it all depends on whether the local depot sends another van out today.
From: william (WILLIAMA)26 Jun 2019 18:04
To: ALL5 of 14
It managed less than 20Km in my direction and is currently "Loading"* whatever that is supposed to mean at Bardon Hill (another Amazon site, still in Leicestershire).

Amazon says:
 
Quote: 
Your parcel is still on the way, but it's running late. Now expected 27 June - 1 July - most parcels arrive in a day.  We’re sorry it won’t arrive today, and we'll let you know when your parcel is out for delivery.  You can always track your parcel for the latest updates.
 
I wasn't irritated but now I am. I expected something a bit more fulsome than a qualified 'sorry'. It actually comes over as 'too bad, never mind'.

*and has been "loading" for the last 3 hours
From: Matt26 Jun 2019 18:09
To: william (WILLIAMA) 6 of 14
Whenever I've ordered something from Amazon that hasn't shown up next day* it's because I somehow magically managed to order it from a third party seller instead of directly from or fulfilled by Amazon.

* Amazon Prime in USA isn't even next day, but that might just be an east coast thing. I'm sure California has it down to next hour by now.
EDITED: 26 Jun 2019 18:10 by MATT
From: CHYRON (DSMITHHFX)26 Jun 2019 18:54
To: william (WILLIAMA) 7 of 14
It just means it was barcode-scanned on a conveyor belt (or a digital manifest submitted), and is now sitting in a bin or back of a truck awaiting the next leg of its journey.
EDITED: 26 Jun 2019 18:55 by DSMITHHFX
From: william (WILLIAMA)26 Jun 2019 20:05
To: Matt 8 of 14
That's true, but I knew that was the case here; it comes from a firm called PrecisionGeek. 

I But all the promises and failures are Amazon's. Also only bothering to notify me after I'd waited when they must have known it was going to be late much earlier (and probably very likely to be late seeing as the items were in Italy).
From: william (WILLIAMA)26 Jun 2019 21:29
To: CHYRON (DSMITHHFX) 9 of 14
So now (20:14) the package has 'departed an Amazon facility Bardon Hill...'

I'm optimistic that this will be a big van doing a series of drop-offs at distribution centres at various points in my direction ending somewhere near Littlehampton (my local depot).

On a totally unrelated topic, I was once told that in the days when homosexuality was illegal, a common coded approach was to ask the time, presumably in a suitably suggestive manner. If the reply came back "12 O'Clock" then that was confirmation of mutual interest. I always thought that the towns Southampton and Northampton could be worked into a similar code; which begs the question of how Littlehampton would fit in. 

On another unrelated note, a friend of mine who went on to great things in Newspaper editorship once worked for the Maidenhead Advertiser which I thought would be a wonderful name for a medieval contact magazine.

I should leave.
From: william (WILLIAMA)27 Jun 2019 09:52
To: william (WILLIAMA) 10 of 14
OK, since I imagine you're all hanging on every word of this thread...
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From: Manthorp27 Jun 2019 10:13
To: william (WILLIAMA) 11 of 14
Gripping. Can't wait to see how it ends.
From: william (WILLIAMA)27 Jun 2019 10:17
To: Manthorp 12 of 14
It's tense. Can't wait 'til it's past tense.
From: CHYRON (DSMITHHFX)27 Jun 2019 12:18
To: Manthorp 13 of 14
It ends with a late delivery, or a lost parcel.
From: william (WILLIAMA)27 Jun 2019 12:35
To: ALL14 of 14
Eh voila!
 
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