Best way to ship wheels and tires
Most cost efficient way. They are monster XDs 22x9.5 shipping from Illinois to Georgia!
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Cut a piece of cardboard to protect the face of the wheels. Buy a couple large rolls of shrink wrap from Office Depot or something similar. Wrap the hell out of each tire and wheel. I've shipped many many wheel/tire combos this way.
UPS will charge you an arm and a leg, but if you are shipping to a business or someone can give you a commercial address, you can send it via freight on a pallet. Sometimes that is cheaper. |
Originally Posted by TJPlatinumEB
(Post 4181433)
Cut a piece of cardboard to protect the face of the wheels. Buy a couple large rolls of shrink wrap from Office Depot or something similar. Wrap the hell out of each tire and wheel. I've shipped many many wheel/tire combos this way. UPS will charge you an arm and a leg, but if you are shipping to a business or someone can give you a commercial address, you can send it via freight on a pallet. Sometimes that is cheaper.
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There is no "usual" to this. It all depends on size, weight, distance traveled, type of service used, residential/commercial to and from locations, etc etc etc.
I just shipped my stock Platinum wheels of my 2013 truck about a month or two ago from Texas to the east coast in VA or MA, somewhere up there. UPS Ground was 65-70 per wheel. You of course would have a lot more size and weight to yours so plan on $100 per wheel and tire to be safe. |
As far a wrapping/packaging the wheels (rims+tires) ... what TJPlatinumEB noted (padding the face of the rim and wrapping in plastic wrap). Have shipped NUMEROUS rims and wheels over the past 10+ years this way.
I've always used ups® as the shipper, however, NEVER EVER take the packages to a ups® Store. Each one is an individually owned franchise and can/do charge higher rates than the online quotes indicate. Take the packaged/wrapped-up wheels to (say) Office DEPOT.
ups® Calculate Time and Cost ««« -click- |
Originally Posted by gDMJoe
(Post 4181566)
As far a wrapping/packaging the wheels (rims+tires) ... what TJPlatinumEB noted (padding the face of the rim and wrapping in plastic wrap). Have shipped NUMEROUS rims and wheels over the past 10+ years this way. I've always used ups® as the shipper, however, NEVER EVER take the packages to a ups® Store. Each one is an individually owned franchise and can/do charge higher rates than the online quotes indicate. Take the packaged/wrapped-up wheels to (say) Office DEPOT.[*] the ship-from point is commercial (rather than residental).[*] the staff there is always helpful.[*] if you're one of their Rewards members you earn points.[*] ups® does a daily, afternoon pick-up at their location. Package/wrap the wheels separately and label them 1 of 4, 2 of 4, etc., etc..ups® Calculate Time and Cost ««« -click-
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If it were me doing the shipping, I would find an LTL carrier for the job. Not a courier with "Freight" attached to it's name. Feel free to PM me for details - logistics is what I do.
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I paid $200 Freight for a modern 2008 GMC 2500HD V8 engine to be shipped from down south to Chicago on a pallet delivered by Semi to my home. That was almost 500lbs.
It's obviously cheaper if they are willing to pick it up @ the shipping station, or it goes to a business. So look into those options also. Coming down residential streets costs more I guess for freight shipments. |
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