At least the faces of some drivers will.
The last two Juniper M10i routers were delivered to the new datacenter today. Sadly, only one of them is usable. The other had damage to the box that made me curious, and the two shock sensors had both been tripped. Opening the box revealed that the handles on the two included power supplies had been smashed and bent inward, and the filler plates had been popped out of the front. Which implies to me a back-to-front shock. But man, what the hell did they do to this thing, play forklift soccer with it?
So it should go without saying that UPS Ground (the carrier that has their label on the box) is going to be taking a big ol' healthy bite of a $20k shit sandwich and reimbursing Juniper for the damaged unit they now have to replace. Meanwhile I will have to wait for another M10i to be shipped to me as an RMA... argh.
The last two Juniper M10i routers were delivered to the new datacenter today. Sadly, only one of them is usable. The other had damage to the box that made me curious, and the two shock sensors had both been tripped. Opening the box revealed that the handles on the two included power supplies had been smashed and bent inward, and the filler plates had been popped out of the front. Which implies to me a back-to-front shock. But man, what the hell did they do to this thing, play forklift soccer with it?
| Tripped shock sensor This is not what you want to see on the outside of the box carrying your $20k chassis. |
| Bent power supply handles Bent handles on the two power supplies. |
| Popped faceplates Four or five of the front filler plates on the M10i were popped out from the shock. |
So it should go without saying that UPS Ground (the carrier that has their label on the box) is going to be taking a big ol' healthy bite of a $20k shit sandwich and reimbursing Juniper for the damaged unit they now have to replace. Meanwhile I will have to wait for another M10i to be shipped to me as an RMA... argh.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-27 09:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-27 11:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-28 01:22 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-28 05:29 am (UTC)I had that happen to a PC once. FedEx delivered it in what was obviously not the original box. Something had shoved the back of the tower case in several inches. Fragments of motherboard could be heard rattling around inside.
Insufficiently packed
Date: 2009-08-28 06:12 am (UTC)UPS insisted on that once for a shipment of a Roland VS-880, which was in its own custom foam-padded road case. They wanted six inches of additional foam around the road case itself. The box ended up being the size of a small refrigerator.
Stuff seems to get dropped a lot when sent by UPS.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-28 08:19 pm (UTC)My personal record for Shipment Dropsies (That I've received, not done) - $150,000 APC UPS/Spotcooler combo that was a full 42U rack when it shipped, and was somewere around a 38U rack when we got it....
no subject
Date: 2009-09-10 11:17 pm (UTC)