I believe STAMPCROW's statement "The least common thing on the planet is common sense" is most wise. People tend to think when they ship something in a box, the box will be handled with the utmost care, top always on top, never crushed or shaken. The box will arrive just as if the shipper last saw the box, and the the item will arrive just as it was when packaged.
HORROR stories from
ebay in particular - from philatelic sellers to boot!
Without naming names, I successfully bid on a several "pristine" Scott National Albums holding many mint US. The 3 ring binders were in their slip cases and all fit nice and snug in what I'll call the main box.
The main box, along with an empty smaller box used as a spacer, were then placed into the shipping box. That was it. There remained an glaring and obvious need to fill the voids between the main and shipping box that the single small empty box only slightly helped with.
To boot - the slip cases were "snug" only in that they fit perfectly into the main box in all dimensions.
The problems?
First - as anyone that moves ANYTHING over any distance and time SHOULD know is that the constant rubbing between two surfaces starts to wear those surfaces. Thus explains why several of the slip case corners were worn into the paper covering. Had the shipper simply placed a single newspaper sheet between the cases things would have been fine.
Secondly - the main box was still somewhat loose in the shipping box and - duh - the box probably fell or such resulting in two of the slip cover corners ripped apart an inch or so. This was the result of the main box moving around in the shipping box.
Thirdly - someday take any 3 ring binder full of paper, philatelic or not, and place it on a table with the spline parallel to the table top and the pages facing the table top. (see photo below) Notice the small gap between the table and the page edges? Not much - maybe a half inch. Imagine, now, if you were to lift the album by it's spline a distance and dropped it back onto the table top. The album covers would stop the spline from moving too much even while the heavy pages wants to continue to fall to towards the table top. Something has to give - and it ended up being the hinges.
Imagine what it felt like to see a wonderful pristine stamp collection bound by every binder album with broken and torn hinges. Evidently the shipping box did fall on the
one side that would do the most damage. Pictures attached.
Although the dealer/seller refunded enough for me to repurchase new binders (the new Scott binders are now finally all metal hinged!) all of the hassle, time and disappointment would not have occurred had the shipper simply placed a small handful of foam peanuts into each slip case and a few more between the main and shipping box.
Anyway - I've transferred the original pages into the new binders but the fear and distrust remains - that
COMMON SENSE does not exist for many without a bit of effort....

