![]() I like to show these two images of letter feeding (to eject fat envelopes) and high-speed sorting and routing that must bend letters this way or that, depending on which direction the flippers snap. 0.28 per envelope is definitely a high cost for some orders, but the majority of my orders are minimum 8. I ship up to 10 loose cards and one 20pt top loader in a team bag - have yet to have an issue with buyers complain about cards being damaged. It might still arrive, but without any tracking whatsoever. Basically the exact same product that eBay recommends. ![]() Because the standard envelope MUST pass through one of those centers that can read the proprietary code, if the letter is rejected for any reason (too fat, unable to bend around the sorting paths, jammed on lumpy content, or other mishap), it will not pass through the special scanner to have its tracking number read. Now, that also brings us to ESUS mail that fails to track at all. So the delivery information given by tracking is only an estimate and can stretch out a little if any, or all, of the remaining postal facilities have any sort of delay. We can also see that ESUS mail is given an estimated delivery when it leaves the last ESUS hub in the route because the downstream postal facilities can not update that proprietary scan (they can't even read the code). Thus, you have shown us that your ESUS trading card mail routes through a major hub that is 100 miles away, while all of your other trading card mail tracks through a lot of sorting centers, but does not pass through that ESUS sorting center.įrom that, we can extrapolate that ESUS mail hops through those special hubs, while USPS mail does not need to go there if it is faster or more efficient to take a different route. Normal USPS tracking numbers do not need to pass through hubs with those non-USPS proprietary-code readers. First, more detailed ESUS tracking is available here:ĮBay's proprietary tracking codes can only be read by special high-speed sorters at major sorting hubs. ![]() Based on your information posted in another thread, I would like to post additional information here that might help others with these special ESUS codes. ![]()
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