weirdami wrote:
Would lots of old newspapers be alright for packing something like an Amiga 1000 for shipping? I'm out of peanuts and bubbles and newspapers are free.
IIRC, Mailboxes Etc. will either give you peanuts for free or sell them at a relative pittance; they're "recycled" from all the other people who dropped off the giant trashbags of peanuts in their garages. (Probably depends how forgiving your local franchise is.) Compared to peanuts, tightly crumpled newspaper is probaby equivalent -- but probably also heavier for the same 'strength,' = slightly more $$ to ship.
Now, the thing is, there are two aspects to packing. On the one hand, you don't want the item to shift; on the other hand, you want something to take the load if the item *does* shift, or has a shipment of bricks dropped on it. Bubble wrap keeps the thing immobile, and will be somewhat 'forgiving' when the UPS guy kicks it, as the bubbles will burst. Peanuts are even more forgiving, but a heavy item will shift and settle in them, as noted. The air bags are really intended as fillers, so for things smaller than a fridge, they serve the same purpose as surrounding the item with bricks -- it'll hold it in place, but dropping it to the floor (or to the tarmac, if the stories of UPS plane unloading are true) will transmit that force right through the bag to the item, rather than 'safely' caving the side of the box.
Generally, you're 'expected' to use something like 5" of peanuts on each side, as regards the shipping companies' claims handling. If your box is too huge, then you can wrap the thing in bubble wrap a few times to keep it from settling in the peanuts. If it's something like a CRT, which is going to be damaged by any jostling, then you may as well immobilize the whole thing in high-strength bubble wrap or airbags, since if they drop it at all, it's screwed anyway.
If you were actually doing this with truly important data (personal move or something), it'd be a good idea to ship the machine by a low cost method, and the hard drives in a hard drive mailer by Airborne or some other service likely to treat them right. F=m*a, and light packages don't have as much inertia if they do get thrown around.
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Of course, if it's something like a ridiculously overengineered Compaq DeskPro, then you can just immobilize it with bags and take pride in any battle scars. ;-)