Showing posts with label Shipping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shipping. Show all posts

Wholesale Suppliers of Automotive Parts - Drop Shipping News For Cheap Auto Parts and Repairs

The term automotive refers to materials that are made into mechanisms or components for automobiles. Examples include catalysts and supports for devices like the emission control, spark plug insulators, and sensors of various kinds.


In the automotive industry, distributors and dealers have always something new for their clients. Sale of automotive parts always includes drop shipping information to facilitate delivery as service to their clients. Hot news includes interactive automotive websites such as Intellichoice.com, Automotive.com, MotorTrend.com and many more. These websites are the premier source for auto and new car leads, used car leads, sub prime finance leads and more. For dealership, a form has to be filled up and submitted for review.


Internationally known wholesaler and manufacturer, not only have interactive websites but also have offshore factories affiliated to them for the purpose of manufacturing automotive parts.

Even though these wholesalers are well-known, quantity discounts are still given to serious customers. They sell in any quantity to meet their clients' needs. This includes drop shipping services.

Some of these well-know manufacturers and wholesalers do not have drop shipping services for shipments into other countries. They only cater to services connecting within the USA, like Hawaii and Alaska.


What is important is that the customer decides on the method of shipping. Priority Mail and United Parcel Services are included in the shipping methods. Clients are informed which are shipped through Priority Mail and which belong to United Parcel Services.


All drop-shipments must be prepaid. The cost of merchandise, handling charges and freight charges are part of the prepayment.

A handling fee is charged to customers on per shipping carton basis. Drop shipping staffs are expert in packaging each shipment. Similar items are put together and secured from any danger of damage to the merchandise. Conditions for drop-shipping are discussed by the shipping staffs to every client. That includes the different charges using the drop-ship rate chart or the actual shipping charges.

More drop-shipping news in the automotive industry is accessible on the interactive websites of these automotive manufacturers and wholesalers. This makes the clients aware of any new rules or regulations in drop-shipping services, any new automotive parts that have to be introduced in the industry, and any new car make and models for smart clients.





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The Auto Shipping Industry - Too Hazardous To Exist?

Everyone in the modern world is discussing the environment and expressing their concerns with words such as sustainability, greening, recycling, means of ecological protection and the replacement of fossil fuels with biomass-type energy. These words are pretty much inventions of the mid 20th to 21st centuries.

Along with the horror stories of global warming, the auto shipping industry is facing serious scrutiny as an environmental hazard. It remains, though, that auto shipping is a valuable service, much in demand and is not going away soon. The industry does bear responsibility for its environmental impact and is taking a hard look at two of the major problems besetting it, those of ground waste and ecological destruction. Let's take a look at a few of the ways the industry can alleviate some of its environmental dilemmas.

Automobiles are infamous for the air pollution they cause but you don't see many people giving them up totally for a bicycle. Cars are convenient, add to our productivity and social connections while at the same time disdained like the auto shippers for their damage to the environment through toxic emissions, oil production and shipping disasters and planned obsolescence factors. The production of automobiles is material and labor intensive and distracts attention from other possibly more noble environmental causes.

The damage done to the environment by automobiles and the shipping of them is not a trivial concern. At the same time there is constant global demand for them. What's needed is to find a balance between efficient business practices and environmental issues to give people what they want without causing harm to our planet's natural resources. The major auto shippers have embraced this idea by creating better containers, robust computerized scheduling and advanced inventory management systems to help alleviate the negative impact their industry has on the environment.

The auto industry for their part has brought to the table such eco-friendly advances as hybrid and electric cars. Toyota's Prius is an early example of this, waking up the rest of the automobile manufacturers to the viability of such an endeavor. The auto shippers might look into taking some of the technology the auto industry has embraced and adapt it to their own usage or use it as a springboard toward further advances that would make sense to their industry.

We the people of the planet place untold pressures on the environment in our need for convenience, practicality and luxury. We have also been made painfully aware of how much we are damaging our world by refusing to delete the automobile from our daily lives.

What is wanted here is a united front of all of us working together to help the environment and save it from destruction. Businesses can do the same by getting together with environmental engineers to come up with new technologies and business practices that will alleviate the harm done to the planet so our descendents will continue to have a world, and hopefully, a better one.


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Shipping Cars By Rail Helps Build Early Auto Industry

Since the automotive industry's earliest beginnings, railroads have been its strongest ally. America's unabashed love affair with the automobile can be, in large part, directly attributed to the railroad's ability to efficiently and economically transport new cars and trucks from manufacturing plants to eager buyers across the United States. From wooden boxcars to circus-style flat cars, the railroads continue to innovate to create more value for the auto industry and, ultimately, the consumer.

Auto Transport by Rail Fuels Car Industry's Early Growth

Reliable and affordable transport by rail was essential to the growth of the early automotive industry. Rail offered a number of important advantages over truck transport such as better access to markets and more efficient delivery.

In 1910, there were less than 15,000 miles of paved roads throughout the United States and only 10,000 commercial trucks on the road nationwide. Trucks could operate only during daylight hours, until 1912 when they were equipped with electric running lights.

Transcontinental rail transport, on the other hand, was possible over 40 years earlier in 1869 when the Union Pacific track from the East met that of the Central Pacific from the West at Promontory, Utah. Across the nation, miles of railroad track increased from just over 35,000 in 1865 to almost 167,000 in 1890. Michigan, the home of the fledgling auto industry, had nearly 7,000 miles of main track in addition to about 2,000 miles of spurs and side tracks. By the turn of the century, three railroads had already spanned Michigan's Lower Peninsula.

Early auto industry pioneers such as David Dunbar Buick, Ransom Olds and Henry Ford easily chose rail transport over trucking as the quickest and most cost effective way to transport their new horseless carriages to market.

Wooden Boxes on Open Rail Cars

Early Ford models were often shipped partially assembled, encased in large wooden boxes and loaded on open rail cars directly outside the Detroit Mack Avenue plant and later from the Highland Park, Michigan factory. The boxed vehicles were then shuttled to the Michigan Central, Grand Trunk or Soo Line terminals and rushed to waiting buyers. When they arrived at their final destination, a Ford mechanic would complete the final assembly of the vehicle often using pieces of the wooden box for the new car's floor and running boards.

The 1909 Sears, Roebuck & Company catalog advertised the Sears Motor Buggy for 5, or 0 without fenders or top, plus shipping to the nearest train station.

To give some idea of how fast the auto industry grew: in 1902 there was one car for every 1.5 million people in the United States; two years later the ratio shrunk to one for every 65,000 people; and by 1909, after the introduction of the Model T, there was one car for every 800 people.

Throughout the early 1900s, shipping cars by rail continued to fuel the success of the auto industry. In 1920, Ford opened the River Rouge Manufacturing Complex. It included 90 different buildings and 93 miles of railroad track to bring in materials essential to manufacturing automobiles, as well as to transport the newly manufactured cars to market. Ford also acquired the Detroit, Toledo and Ironton (DT&I) Railroad with 454 miles of main track. The DT&I brought coal into the plant from Ford's privately owned mines in Kentucky and shipped automobiles from Detroit to Ironton, Ohio.


From Boxcars to Double-Deckers

Boxcars soon became the preferred method of auto transport because they offered increased protection from the elements. The loading process, however, was laborious and time consuming.

New automobiles were either manually or mechanically lifted. Two to three vehicles could be successfully loaded into one 28-foot long boxcar. Railroads soon extended boxcars to 36 feet in length to accommodate even more automobiles. To make loading easier, some railcars were modified with larger sliding double doors. Other railcars had doors added at one or both ends.

In 1923, railroads experimented by modifying a group of 61-foot long wood-frame flat cars. Collapsible frames were added to allow double-deck operation. Through the 1940s and 1950s other railroads also experimented with double-deckers, as well as loading assemblies, which would lift one car above the other.

The Circus Comes To Town

As America's fascination with new cars and trucks continued to grow, the railroad industry also continued to search for more efficient methods to load and unload new vehicles onto rail cars. The answer would come from another iconic American institution - the traveling circus.

Circuses, which were major haulers of wheeled vehicles from the late 1800s through the early 1900s, developed a simple and efficient process to load vehicles on rail cars. Rather than lift vehicles, they cleverly strung a number of flat cars together, set temporary bridge plates in place to span the gaps between each car, and simply drove or towed wheeled circus vehicles down the length of the train.

Railroads quickly adopted this method of loading new cars and trucks. The addition of foldaway bridges to the ends of the flat cars would soon lead to other innovations that would make transporting new cars and trucks by rail even more efficient.

Today, railroads account for 43 percent of intercity freight volume and a significant portion of rail intercity shipments involve finished automobiles. It is the most efficient and cost-effective transportation system, saving consumers billions of dollars according to the Association of American Railroads. Railroads still load vehicles using a version of the ramps first used by the traveling circus, but now automobiles move to market on auto trains that use specially designed, fully enclosed rail cars made just for shipping automobiles. Odds are high, if you are driving a brand new automobile, it was delivered to your dealer on our nation's rail network.


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