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Farmall & IHC Tractors Discussion Forum
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Shipping to our Friends in Canada

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MagMan

08-24-2004 17:20:09




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I was wondering if any one in Canada knows whats involved in shipping to your country these days? I would like to give the people north of the border the option of buying my rebuilt mags off from Ebay. But I have no Idea if it costs more for shipping. Or who to use to ship. And any other kind of red tape I may have to go through. Any help would be appreciated. JON




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farmallkid From ONT.

08-25-2004 14:51:10




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 Re: Shipping to our Friends in Canada in reply to MagMan, 08-24-2004 17:20:09  
We have gotten A few things from the states, A couple precleaners, and a belt pulley, We have asked both guys to write the word GIFT on it, then you dont have to pay the tax that the government puts on. Both sellers were more than happy to put GIFT on it. I ordered some carrhart overalls from out of NEB somewhere, i had to pay an extra $40 at the door. Or if antique tractor part works to then write it.

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scruffy

08-24-2004 19:00:01




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 Re: Shipping to our Friends in Canada in reply to MagMan, 08-24-2004 17:20:09  
I have bought lots of parts off E-bay for my farmalls. UPS charges a brokerage fee and adds provincial tax and a Goods and Services Tax to all imports. (The buyer gets stuck with these, not the seller/shipper). Last week it cost me $70 extra for a manifold. When it is shipped by post, and it is noted "antique tractor part". There is no added cost at all! Shipping does cost about double to cross the border as it is to mail within the cont. states.

Thank you for considering us in the frozen north...

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Stick

08-25-2004 12:14:02




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 Re: Shipping to our Friends in Canada in reply to scruffy, 08-24-2004 19:00:01  
Definitely, thank you for considering us. Many business simply refuse to ship to Canada anymore.

My preference, just because of where I live, is the post office.

UPS brokerage fees are absolutely outrageous up here. How about a $60US fibreglass saddlebag lid for a Harley (no duty on harley parts) that wound up costing $279CDN by the time UPS got through with it? And.....they sent it via Canada Post anyway because they don't service rural areas. They also will not deliver to a PO Box number or a land description (rural address) which is all some of us have. We don't have street addresses or local mail delivery. So....I ended up paying them (UPS)major money to use the post office! As parcel services go, Purolator is much better, followed by FEDEX. I will never deal with UPS again on anything.

Oh, a funny note about country living. Once i was arguing on the phone about this very subject and the woman, exasperated when I maintained that I have no street address and wanted my shipment sent via mail, to my PO Box number, asked me, "ok....if your house was on fire and you called 911, what address would you give them?" I said, "Well, it would burn to the ground if I did that cuz we don't HAVE 911 here, but if I called the fire department, I'd have to tell them "Stan Harrisson's Old Place" even though old Stan's been dead for 40 years, or they'd never find it." Or they always want to know my cell phone number. Well, go-o-ollee! Cell phones don't work here..... .DUH! City people just don't get it! One woman when I was ordering computer parts asked me what my address was listed as in the phone book. "Farm" sez I. She then asks, "Yeah, but where?" "Right in the phone book, after my name, it says Farm..... .as an address, just like nearly everyone else in my local phone book. That's how we're listed by the phone company" She nearly had a heart attack laughing at that one. "What's so funny about living on a farm?" I says. "I just had this vision of a hick in bib overalls chewing on a piece of straw typing at the computer" she says, still laughing. SHEESH!

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MagMan

08-25-2004 15:02:58




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 Re: Shipping to our Friends in Canada in reply to Stick, 08-25-2004 12:14:02  
That is a pretty good one. Thats the way I would love to live somewhere with no neighbors. Not that mine bug me now but I like the outdoors and cool weather. I live in rual NY. I tryed to find a zip code in Canada to put in for the post office just to see what it would cost to send a 9lb mag and struck out. JON



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Stick

08-25-2004 15:56:19




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 Re: Shipping to our Friends in Canada in reply to MagMan, 08-25-2004 15:02:58  
try S0G 3N0

That's Moosomin, SK the 0's are zeroes.



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Haas

08-24-2004 18:57:22




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 Re: Shipping to our Friends in Canada in reply to MagMan, 08-24-2004 17:20:09  
No duty on farm equipment to Canada. One item to watch for is foreign exchange fees on the payments. That will catch you if the check or money order is drawn on a Canadian bank, even if the denomination is in US dollars. Had that happen at my bank, don't recall how much the fee was. Also, a delay in credit of the funds. I think shipping costs are fairly straight forward. UPS or the Post office will quote rates to Canada.

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Hugh MacKay

08-24-2004 19:47:28




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 Re: Shipping to our Friends in Canada in reply to Haas, 08-24-2004 18:57:22  
Haas: Just curious about those fees. I have one of those US dollar accounts with the Royal Bank of Canada, and have been assured there are no fees. I have used this on several ocasions buying items in your country. I have never had any complaint, from people I was buying from.

Most of what I have bought are manuals shipped by mail. The postage either way is is substancially more than rates within either country. I will also warn you of another little annoyance shipping via UPS. They are very very economical within either country. When you do cross border shipping with them, the brokerage fees for clearing customs is often as much as the shipping. The net result is the good old Canada Post and the good old US postal service are less money.

I have an item right now, a guy in NY wants, and it weighs about 40 lbs. I am 35 miles from the border (Port Huron MI) If I drive to Port Huron, go through customs, ship from Port Huron, via UPS, it can be done for $22. USD. Problem with that is I wouldn't have a return address. I can ship from here via UPS, $35. CAD plus a brokerage fee I will be billed for. I can ship via Canada Post on to US mail, to the customer for $60. CAD.

I have been told, and not just sure of the whole story, there is a parcel sitting in a warehouse, with a $1,600. brokerage fee against it and no one is willing to pay that fee. As I said I don't know the whole story, I do know enough to be careful and advise others to check out these extra charges.

Another item in shipping into Canada, is our beloved Goods and Services Tax. I had a guy send me a manual and put on parcel it was worth $1. No tax was applied. I had another manual actually cost me less but shipper put on parcel, value of book plus cost of shipping for insurance purposes. I paid 15% on the total.

I just throw this in being my experience.

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Haas

08-25-2004 18:49:31




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 Re: Shipping to our Friends in Canada in reply to Hugh MacKay, 08-24-2004 19:47:28  
Thanks, good info. Don't know the story on the USD Canadian account that I was paid from. Just know that my bank charged me a fee because it required special handling and would not go through the regular US banking system. It was a relatively small item, as I recall less than $100. I shipped by US postal service and there was no problem with that. This was an exception for me, as I usually don't ship out of the US. Had a guy in Australia want one of my manuals and was going to charge him $10 for it but when I found out he was in Tazmania, I sent him the manual no charge, I think it cost about $3 by US Postal service. For my trouble, I got a Hobart Engine society cap and a book by return mail.

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Hugh MacKay

08-26-2004 02:16:39




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 Re: Shipping to our Friends in Canada in reply to Haas, 08-25-2004 18:49:31  
Hass: I guess I'm the one who should be thanking you for bringing this USD account item to my attention. I will check with a couple of the guys I sent checks to and see if they had the same experience as you. I was assured by the Royal Bank where I have my account, this would not happen.

I just received a check from the US in USD and of course deposited to my USD account. I must check that one out as well.

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Nebraska Cowman

08-24-2004 17:31:40




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 Re: Shipping to our Friends in Canada in reply to MagMan, 08-24-2004 17:20:09  
I ship mags UPS to Canada. All you have to do is fill out an ivoice in triplicate and atatch it in a seperate plastic sheath on the ouside of the package. You can get all the info at their website.



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harley1983

08-24-2004 19:30:03




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 Re: Shipping to our Friends in Canada in reply to Nebraska Cowman, 08-24-2004 17:31:40  
Hey Nebraska Cowman, now that you brought it up, I have a farmall H with a 6-volt generator and negative 6-volt battery, and a magneto, and it would have to be a 6-volt coil inside the cover in front of the mag. My question is, can this be converted to 12-volt by adding the alternater, battery, or do I have to start over and go from front to back with new 12-volt stuff. I have switched a hundred systems with a one wire alternater and battery, but never one with a mag before. Thanks, Allen

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MN Scott

08-24-2004 20:44:21




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 Re: Shipping to our Friends in Canada in reply to harley1983, 08-24-2004 19:30:03  
A mag generates its own power. There is no connection to the electrical system. One wire runs from the mag to the kill switch that grounds out the mag when the switch is pushed in.



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Harley1983

08-25-2004 22:35:14




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 Re: Shipping to our Friends in Canada in reply to MN Scott, 08-24-2004 20:44:21  
Great, thanks. I guess you"re right, I never thought that far ahead, but theoretically you can have two different voltage systems here can"t you. 12-volt for the starter, 6-volt from the mag to the engine. Cool, thanks, Harley



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