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Scott Gordo
March 31st 06, 08:26 PM
I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not sure
if this is standard practice.
I'm in the middle of choosing my flights. Can anyone point out a
listing of airlines that provide this service for free?

Thanks,
Scott

IT3
March 31st 06, 08:37 PM
Are you using a CrateWorks bike box? Some airlines do not charge extra
for it solely because it is below thier maximum dims and it does not
look like a bike box. I HIGHLY reccomend one. I let the Military Cargo
Handlers (not know for ebing "gentle") ship my SS from Memphis, TN to
Kuwait via M.A.C. in one and despite thier best efforts they could not
even damage the box, let alone the bike inside it.

Simon Cooper
March 31st 06, 09:19 PM
"Scott Gordo" > wrote in message
oups.com...
> I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
> full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not sure
> if this is standard practice.
> I'm in the middle of choosing my flights. Can anyone point out a
> listing of airlines that provide this service for free?
>
> Thanks,
> Scott

I flew Virgin from Newark back to London last summer with a bike in a
standard "as shipped to bike shop" box with no charges or even raised
eyebrows.

Despite the fact they could see into the box through handholds, they still
wanted to x-ray it. Bet that showed them alot...

I enquired of American to fly EWR-Indiana last year, and they said that
would be OK in a box but not as a loose bike (they'd take it but charge).
Flew London to Zurich about 5 years ago with a loose bike on EasyJet
(usually one of the worst offenders at charging for anything non-standard)
with no charges or trouble.

Scott Gordo
March 31st 06, 09:56 PM
IT3 wrote:
> Are you using a CrateWorks bike box? Some airlines do not charge extra
> for it solely because it is below thier maximum dims and it does not
> look like a bike box. I HIGHLY reccomend one. I let the Military Cargo
> Handlers (not know for ebing "gentle") ship my SS from Memphis, TN to
> Kuwait via M.A.C. in one and despite thier best efforts they could not
> even damage the box, let alone the bike inside it.

I've used a regular, freebie bike box in the past without issue, though
I'm considering something a little more heavy duty.

eflayer2
March 31st 06, 10:20 PM
I just flew British from SF to London and two mates were not charged
extra for full size bike boxes. However we then flew Thompson Air from
Palma Mallorca to London and they definitely have different rules.
With Thompson there is a 44 pound checked weigt limit per person. So
if your stuff and/or your bike take you over that limit there is an
absurd charge per kilo after that. One small saving grace is they
appear to have a special "low" price for sports equipment which I
believe came to around $50. The arrangement to get the "special" rate
must be made at the time you purchase your ticket. We tried to get a
Spanish taxi to take a full size bike travel case and they would not
consider it. Bottom line: get your connections straight before you
need to.

Scott Gordo
March 31st 06, 10:46 PM
wrote:
> Scott Gordo writes:
>
> > I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
> > full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not
> > sure if this is standard practice. I'm in the middle of choosing my
> > flights. Can anyone point out a listing of airlines that provide
> > this service for free?
>
> I didn't check it out and got reamed by Continental last year 2 x $80.
> When planning to book, ask the airline whether there is a charge. You
> can do this by email or phone if you look up their web site. I was
> never charges in the past. Times are getting tighter.
>
> Jobst Brandt

Will do. Continental is one of the front runners right now. Was the
cost based on it being a bicycle, box dimensions, or was it a weight
penalty?

Scott

Scott Gordo
March 31st 06, 11:04 PM
Scott Gordo wrote:
> wrote:
> > Scott Gordo writes:
> >
> > > I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
> > > full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not
> > > sure if this is standard practice. I'm in the middle of choosing my
> > > flights. Can anyone point out a listing of airlines that provide
> > > this service for free?
> >
> > I didn't check it out and got reamed by Continental last year 2 x $80.
> > When planning to book, ask the airline whether there is a charge. You
> > can do this by email or phone if you look up their web site. I was
> > never charges in the past. Times are getting tighter.
> >
> > Jobst Brandt
>
> Will do. Continental is one of the front runners right now. Was the
> cost based on it being a bicycle, box dimensions, or was it a weight
> penalty?
>
> Scott

Just got off the phone. MF'ers. $80 each way for a 22lb road bike +
box.

/s

Jasper Janssen
March 31st 06, 11:16 PM
On Fri, 31 Mar 2006 15:19:09 -0500, "Simon Cooper" >
wrote:

>I enquired of American to fly EWR-Indiana last year, and they said that
>would be OK in a box but not as a loose bike (they'd take it but charge).
>Flew London to Zurich about 5 years ago with a loose bike on EasyJet
>(usually one of the worst offenders at charging for anything non-standard)
>with no charges or trouble.

Easyjet charges for a bike or skis, but it's fairly reasonably priced at
25 eur per flight.

Jasper

SMS
March 31st 06, 11:48 PM
Scott Gordo wrote:
> I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
> full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not sure
> if this is standard practice.
> I'm in the middle of choosing my flights. Can anyone point out a
> listing of airlines that provide this service for free?

LAW used to have an arrangement for free bicycle transport with several
airlines, but it appears as if only Frontier Airlines still
participates, which doesn't help you much.

Mike Jacoubowsky
April 1st 06, 01:00 AM
>> I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
>> full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not
>> sure if this is standard practice. I'm in the middle of choosing my
>> flights. Can anyone point out a listing of airlines that provide
>> this service for free?
>
> I didn't check it out and got reamed by Continental last year 2 x $80.
> When planning to book, ask the airline whether there is a charge. You
> can do this by email or phone if you look up their web site. I was
> never charges in the past. Times are getting tighter.
>
> Jobst Brandt

Was there a domestic leg on your flight? Could be that it didn't matter, but
I've heard that some people have had issues when their flight started on a
US-US leg before heading overseas (for example, San
Francisco/Chicago/Paris). Every airline that I know of charges for domestic
flights, but some report that they have been mistakenly charged for the
domestic portion of an International flight because somebody didn't know
the rules.

Having said that, I think it's safe to assume that airlines will be charging
for bicycles on International flights as normal policy in the near future.
Revenue enhancement.

By the way, whatever you hear on the phone when you call doesn't hold much
weight when you're at the counter. If there's something on the website,
print it out. Even then someone might argue it with you, and like it or not,
the Gate Agent is King or Queen. Always best to be pleasant with them.

--Mike Jacoubowsky
Chain Reaction Bicycles
www.ChainReaction.com
Redwood City & Los Altos, CA USA

Mike Jacoubowsky
April 1st 06, 01:06 AM
> I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
> full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not sure
> if this is standard practice.
> I'm in the middle of choosing my flights. Can anyone point out a
> listing of airlines that provide this service for free?
>
> Thanks,
> Scott

Scott: Whether they charge you or not, watch the new weight limits!!! It's
not like the old days, where you could pile all sorts of other stuff into
the box. Most airlines have already adopted a 50lb weight limit (unless you
have "status" with the airline, in which case some allow up to 70, which
used to be normal).

One other thing to consider- some airports do their security searches right
out on the floor, in front of everybody. CDG (Paris) is amazing this way.
You might want to make sure that whatever you pack won't be embarassing when
it's laid out on the floor in front of everybody. That might mean washing
underwear (something several of the passengers at CDG most certainly hadn't
considered).

--Mike Jacoubowsky
Chain Reaction Bicycles
www.ChainReaction.com
Redwood City & Los Altos, CA USA

Bjorn Haake
April 1st 06, 01:19 AM
"Scott Gordo" > wrote in message
oups.com...
> I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
> full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not sure
> if this is standard practice.
> I'm in the middle of choosing my flights. Can anyone point out a
> listing of airlines that provide this service for free?

I brought a bike with Lufthansa last year from Germany w/o charge. Regular
bike store card board box.


>
> Thanks,
> Scott
>

April 1st 06, 02:21 AM
Scott Gordo writes:

>>> I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in
>>> a full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm
>>> not sure if this is standard practice. I'm in the middle of
>>> choosing my flights. Can anyone point out a listing of airlines
>>> that provide this service for free?

>> I didn't check it out and got reamed by Continental last year 2 x
>> $80. When planning to book, ask the airline whether there is a
>> charge. You can do this by email or phone if you look up their web
>> site. I was never charges in the past. Times are getting tighter.

> Will do. Continental is one of the front runners right now. Was the
> cost based on it being a bicycle, box dimensions, or was it a weight
> penalty?

Bicycles, skis, and other sporting equipment gets this charge at
Continental. They were just rude about it.

Jobst Brandt

Phil Holman
April 1st 06, 02:44 AM
If you join USA cycling .........

Bike Voucher Program (United Airlines)
Each current annual licensed USA Cycling member is eligible to receive
two (2) FREE one-way bike vouchers ($160 value) per calendar year as a
member benefit. VOUCHERS ARE AVAILABLE WHILE SUPPLIES LAST. These
vouchers cannot be duplicated.

Phil H

"Scott Gordo" > wrote in message
oups.com...
> I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
> full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not sure
> if this is standard practice.
> I'm in the middle of choosing my flights. Can anyone point out a
> listing of airlines that provide this service for free?
>
> Thanks,
> Scott
>

Drew
April 1st 06, 04:08 AM
>> penalty?
>>
>> Scott
>
> Just got off the phone. MF'ers. $80 each way for a 22lb road bike +
> box.
>
> /s
>

Maybe UPS is less expensive? That's if you have somewhere to send it...
Drew

Charles .
April 1st 06, 04:53 AM
When using a cardboard bike shop box consider whether you can store it at
your destination for the return trip.

Once in France I had a hell of a time finding a box for my return leg. They
said "using a bike box was an American thing". Since I was bike touring I
did not have a place to store the box. Oh, yea the box packed with
everything was 70.5 lbs. Free shipping on a Wash DC to JFK to Paris flight.
"Bjorn Haake" > wrote in message
...
>
> "Scott Gordo" > wrote in message
> oups.com...
> > I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
> > full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not sure
> > if this is standard practice.
> > I'm in the middle of choosing my flights. Can anyone point out a
> > listing of airlines that provide this service for free?
>
> I brought a bike with Lufthansa last year from Germany w/o charge. Regular
> bike store card board box.
>
>
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Scott
> >
>
>

OliverS
April 1st 06, 03:29 PM
Scott Gordo wrote:
> I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
> full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not sure
> if this is standard practice.
> I'm in the middle of choosing my flights. Can anyone point out a
> listing of airlines that provide this service for free?
>
> Thanks,
> Scott
>
Try this link:

http://www.gfarnsworth.com/BikeAccess/airlines.cfm

We travel with S&S coupled bikes and have no problems, but I try to keep
the cases under 50 pounds. You do have to check weight limits. Also,
remember that these "parcels" are handled by human beings who have
physical limitations. I am always amazed at people who want to stuff
their bike boxes with extraneous stuff, and then want the airlines to
handle 100 lb plus bike boxes gratis.

Oliver S

--
Cheers! OliverS
When replying personally, remove "_nospam_"

"When I see an adult on a bicycle, I do not despair for the future of
the human race." HG Wells

mark
April 1st 06, 04:33 PM
"Scott Gordo" wrote ...
> I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
> full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not sure
> if this is standard practice.
> I'm in the middle of choosing my flights. Can anyone point out a
> listing of airlines that provide this service for free?
>
> Thanks,
> Scott
>

British Airways takes bikes as one of the two allowed pieces of checked
luggage between North America and Europe, but they charge to take bikes on
other routes where baggage allowances are calculated differently.

Lufthansa does the same, they ask you to call their toll free line to
reserve a spot for the bike. I was able to reserve a spot for my bike for a
round trip with one connection each way with no problem. Apparently the toll
free line goes to Germany, I was told "You must the drive stick sideways
fix". Between knowing some German and having travelled with bikes before I
was able to translate this as "turn the handlebars sideways".

Various American carriers used to carry bikes free on flights to Europe but
charge for domestic trips. They seem to have resolved that inconsistency by
charging a stiff fee to take bikes on all flights.

In 2000 I was able to buy a cardboard bike box in Gatwick airport for my
return flight to Denver. In 2004 I was not able to buy a bike box at
Heathrow, although the shop was operated by the same company. I'm guessing
that buying your bike box in the airport is a thing of the past.

Like everyone said, check the individual airline's websites and print out a
copy of the web page. If your flight involves multiple airlines, check all
the airline's websites, you will probably be bound by the stricter set of
regulations.
--
mark

Mike Jacoubowsky
April 1st 06, 11:10 PM
> Maybe UPS is less expensive? That's if you have somewhere to send it...
> Drew

Uh... that's a big negative. UPS is generally in the $240+ range. Ouch!

--Mike Jacoubowsky
Chain Reaction Bicycles
www.ChainReaction.com
Redwood City & Los Altos, CA USA

"Drew" > wrote in message
news:5amXf.14805$6a1.10492@fed1read04...
>
>>> penalty?
>>>
>>> Scott
>>
>> Just got off the phone. MF'ers. $80 each way for a 22lb road bike +
>> box.
>>
>> /s
>>
>
> Maybe UPS is less expensive? That's if you have somewhere to send it...
> Drew
>

Michael Wileman
April 2nd 06, 01:22 AM
In > writes:

>Scott Gordo writes:

>> I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
>> full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not
>> sure if this is standard practice. I'm in the middle of choosing my
>> flights. Can anyone point out a listing of airlines that provide
>> this service for free?

>I didn't check it out and got reamed by Continental last year 2 x $80.
>When planning to book, ask the airline whether there is a charge. You
>can do this by email or phone if you look up their web site. I was
>never charges in the past. Times are getting tighter.

I almost got burned on this once when Sabena told me on the
phone it was free, but the Delta check-in agent insisted I
pay the Delta fee.

Take the name and number of whoever you speak to, and ask
them if they will fax you a statement of the cost. Anything
to support your case when the person behind the counter is
clueless.

Mike

Scott Gordo
April 3rd 06, 10:03 PM
Scott Gordo wrote:
> I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
> full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not sure
> if this is standard practice.
> I'm in the middle of choosing my flights. Can anyone point out a
> listing of airlines that provide this service for free?
>
> Thanks,
> Scott

Found this: http://www.ibike.org/encouragement/travel/bagregs.htm
It's hardly in stone, but I appreciated the resource/attempt.

I've had two people at Air France (800-237-2747, spoke to Pablo)
confirm that I can bring a bicycle on board free of charge, but no one
will give me WRITTEN confirmation for the showdown I'm expecting to
encounter at check in. Supposedly it's somewhere on the site, but
they're not making it obvious.
Also emailed Air France ) who, of course, told me
to call the 800 number above.
Whee!

Scott

Per Löwdin
April 7th 06, 11:39 AM
"Scott Gordo" > skrev i meddelandet
oups.com...
> I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
> full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not sure
> if this is standard practice.

It depends, across the Atlantic you can usually have 60 kilo in two pieces,
if one is a boxed bike no sweat as long as it is neatly boxed. We flew from
San Diego to Stockholm once with boxed bikes, and from San Francisco another
time, changing in Chicago, no problems.

We have also flewn with everything stuffed into four boxes, two each, as we
had BOBs, worked fine, though the security people in the US found it a bit
unusal, we heard some comments, but then there is no law against travelling
with boxes instead of suitcases.

In Europe and Asia it can vary a lot. Sometimes there is a fixed surcharge,
e.g., at flights to Mallorca or the Canary Islands, at other times it
appears to depend on the mood of the people that check you in.

Per
http://lowdin.nu

RobertPerkins
April 7th 06, 03:25 PM
The legal limit is generally 62" length plus width plus height. The
_only_ way I know of to get your bike to travel free is to get a bike
with S&S couplers. Then, you can pack the bike to fit into a
26"x26"x10" case. Check out http://www.sandsmachine.com/regs.htm.
I have such a bike. It takes 30-45min to assemble and tune it (after
practice). It weighs in at 48lbs bike and case, which is just under
the newer, lower domestic bag weight limits of 50lb.

April 7th 06, 03:50 PM
Per Löwdin wrote:
> "Scott Gordo" > skrev i meddelandet
> oups.com...
> > I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
> > full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not sure
> > if this is standard practice.
>
> It depends, across the Atlantic you can usually have 60 kilo in two pieces,
> if one is a boxed bike no sweat as long as it is neatly boxed. We flew from
> San Diego to Stockholm once with boxed bikes, and from San Francisco another
> time, changing in Chicago, no problems.
>
> We have also flewn with everything stuffed into four boxes, two each, as we
> had BOBs, worked fine, though the security people in the US found it a bit
> unusal, we heard some comments, but then there is no law against travelling
> with boxes instead of suitcases.
>
> In Europe and Asia it can vary a lot. Sometimes there is a fixed surcharge,
> e.g., at flights to Mallorca or the Canary Islands, at other times it
> appears to depend on the mood of the people that check you in.
>
> Per
> http://lowdin.nu

WHEN did you do this international traveling? That is what is relevant
for the question being asked here. Many, many people have flown with a
bike between the US and Europe and the bike was just part of the
luggage and no extra charge was assessed. I did it on British Airways
in 1992 and TWA in 2000. Just put the bike in a big bike box from the
bike shop. Or bought a bike box at the airport on the return leg. But
that was before the September 11 event and all of the supposedly
increased airline security. And before almost every airline filed
bankruptcy in the US. What are the standards now? Is a bike free and
just part of the luggage on international flights?

Scott Gordo
April 7th 06, 04:24 PM
Scott Gordo wrote:
> Scott Gordo wrote:
> > I'm planning on taking an overseas trip in May with my bicycle in a
> > full-sized box. I've done it once before and it was free. I'm not sure
> > if this is standard practice.
> > I'm in the middle of choosing my flights. Can anyone point out a
> > listing of airlines that provide this service for free?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Scott
>
> Found this: http://www.ibike.org/encouragement/travel/bagregs.htm
> It's hardly in stone, but I appreciated the resource/attempt.
>
> I've had two people at Air France (800-237-2747, spoke to Pablo)
> confirm that I can bring a bicycle on board free of charge, but no one
> will give me WRITTEN confirmation for the showdown I'm expecting to
> encounter at check in. Supposedly it's somewhere on the site, but
> they're not making it obvious.
> Also emailed Air France ) who, of course, told me
> to call the 800 number above.
> Whee!
>
> Scott

FYI: I bit the bullet and I'll be flying Continental. 160 smackeroos
extra for a bicycle round trip. It's annoying and ludicrous and I hate
rewarding them, but Continental had direct flights at the times I
wanted, and the flight + bike price was on the high side but
acceptable. Basically, I'll be paying a premium for peace of mind and
convenience. Plus, I won't have to wonder whether or not I'll get
screwed at check-in. I'm pre-screwed.

Scott

(PeteCresswell)
April 8th 06, 02:02 AM
Per Scott Gordo:
>Basically, I'll be paying a premium for peace of mind and
>convenience. Plus, I won't have to wonder whether or not I'll get
>screwed at check-in. I'm pre-screwed.

The real "premium for peace of mind" would be to FedEx or UPS it with insurance.
Last time I took toys with me on an airline flite (windsurfing stuff to
Honoruru) the airline's liability limit was something ludicrous - like
$300-$400.
--
PeteCresswell

Mike Jacoubowsky
April 8th 06, 05:39 PM
>>Basically, I'll be paying a premium for peace of mind and
>>convenience. Plus, I won't have to wonder whether or not I'll get
>>screwed at check-in. I'm pre-screwed.
>
> The real "premium for peace of mind" would be to FedEx or UPS it with
> insurance.
> Last time I took toys with me on an airline flite (windsurfing stuff to
> Honoruru) the airline's liability limit was something ludicrous - like
> $300-$400.
> --
> PeteCresswell

Fortunately, my bicycle has always arrived in one piece, and at the same
time I got there. Even on my trip to Maui, with three connecting flights,
including one where the connection was only 20 minutes (due to a late
flight) and we were told there was no way the baggage would make it on that
flight. Everything did. United, for what it's worth (although it was Aloha
on the final inter-island flight with the tight connection).

--Mike-- Chain Reaction Bicycles
www.ChainReactionBicycles.com


"(PeteCresswell)" > wrote in message
...
> Per Scott Gordo:
>>Basically, I'll be paying a premium for peace of mind and
>>convenience. Plus, I won't have to wonder whether or not I'll get
>>screwed at check-in. I'm pre-screwed.
>
> The real "premium for peace of mind" would be to FedEx or UPS it with
> insurance.
> Last time I took toys with me on an airline flite (windsurfing stuff to
> Honoruru) the airline's liability limit was something ludicrous - like
> $300-$400.
> --
> PeteCresswell

Matt O'Toole
April 9th 06, 02:41 AM
On Fri, 31 Mar 2006 19:08:23 -0800, Drew wrote:

> Maybe UPS is less expensive? That's if you have somewhere to send it...

Fedex ground is cheaper still for bikes. I've spent less than $30 to go
coast to coast. The main problem is being without your
bike for a few days! Overseas though -- forget it. Even the most
egregious baggage charge would be cheaper.

Coupled frames (S&S, Ritchey, etc.) are well worth the investment, if you
travel with your bike more than a few times in a few years. Riders I know
who have these frames say it's the best equipment investment they ever
made. I don't understand why they're not marketed more aggressively.

Matt O.

Matt O'Toole
April 9th 06, 02:55 AM
On Fri, 07 Apr 2006 07:25:19 -0700, RobertPerkins wrote:

> The legal limit is generally 62" length plus width plus height. The
> _only_ way I know of to get your bike to travel free is to get a bike
> with S&S couplers. Then, you can pack the bike to fit into a
> 26"x26"x10" case. Check out http://www.sandsmachine.com/regs.htm. I
> have such a bike. It takes 30-45min to assemble and tune it (after
> practice). It weighs in at 48lbs bike and case, which is just under the
> newer, lower domestic bag weight limits of 50lb.

Ritchey's Breakaway is similar, if a little less solid. There are videos
on Ritchey's website showing Tom Ritchey either assembling or breaking
down the bike, in about 10 minutes. Dahon sells a slightly cheaper
version of the Breakaway, with 105 instead of Ultegra, etc.

Some folks are putting big miles on Breakaways:

http://breakawaytoday.blogspot.com/

Matt O.

Shaun aRe
April 9th 06, 07:15 PM
Bad idea - Better with big airplane - HTH.






Shaun aRe

Simon Cooper
April 10th 06, 08:01 AM
"(PeteCresswell)" > wrote in message
...
> Per Scott Gordo:
> >Basically, I'll be paying a premium for peace of mind and
> >convenience. Plus, I won't have to wonder whether or not I'll get
> >screwed at check-in. I'm pre-screwed.
>
> The real "premium for peace of mind" would be to FedEx or UPS it with
insurance.
> Last time I took toys with me on an airline flite (windsurfing stuff to
> Honoruru) the airline's liability limit was something ludicrous - like
> $300-$400.

While that's probably true, I've discovered that buying my tickets with my
American Express automatically qualifies me to travel insurance with no
deductable and has a much more generous limit, that I can't remember, since
I haven't lost anything terribly valuable. Broken Kayak paddle the airline
disowned wasn't a problem with them.

UPS or FedEx will charge a premium for insurance over $100 worth of stuff.
I ship $10-100k instruments from time to time, the clerks usually mention to
the drivers that "that one's insured for $X000" if you pay extra for the
insurance. Hence have decided that paying for a little insurance in such
cases is well worth it...

Scott Gordo
April 10th 06, 03:39 PM
Simon Cooper wrote:
> "(PeteCresswell)" > wrote in message
> ...
> > Per Scott Gordo:
> > >Basically, I'll be paying a premium for peace of mind and
> > >convenience. Plus, I won't have to wonder whether or not I'll get
> > >screwed at check-in. I'm pre-screwed.
> >
> > The real "premium for peace of mind" would be to FedEx or UPS it with
> insurance.
> > Last time I took toys with me on an airline flite (windsurfing stuff to
> > Honoruru) the airline's liability limit was something ludicrous - like
> > $300-$400.
>
> While that's probably true, I've discovered that buying my tickets with my
> American Express automatically qualifies me to travel insurance with no
> deductable and has a much more generous limit, that I can't remember, since
> I haven't lost anything terribly valuable. Broken Kayak paddle the airline
> disowned wasn't a problem with them.
>
> UPS or FedEx will charge a premium for insurance over $100 worth of stuff.
> I ship $10-100k instruments from time to time, the clerks usually mention to
> the drivers that "that one's insured for $X000" if you pay extra for the
> insurance. Hence have decided that paying for a little insurance in such
> cases is well worth it...

Is that AMEX qualification automatic for all their cards, or is it a
special program? (It's what I used.)

Thanks.

Scott

pacqueman
April 10th 06, 05:26 PM
Mike Jacoubowsky wrote:


> By the way, whatever you hear on the phone when you call doesn't hold much
> weight when you're at the counter. If there's something on the website,
> print it out. Even then someone might argue it with you, and like it or not,
> the Gate Agent is King or Queen. Always best to be pleasant with them.

As Mike says, the check-in agent is the judge, jury and jailer when it
comes to baggage fees. As long as the item does not exceed the
dimensional or weigth limits, the agent can send it through without a
charge.

Several weeks ago I flew on AA from Dubai to Boston (AA/BA codeshare).
When booking the flight, the AA rep. assured me there would be no
excess baggage fee for my bike if I packed it in a hard/shell case and
it did not exceed the weight or dimensional limits. (It was packed in a
B&W bike case (the trapezoidal one, not the full-size square box) and
was under both limits.) However, reality at the check-in counter was
that I had to pay AED500 (USD137) to send the bike, even though it was
one of my two checked bags.

Aside from smiling and being very nice to the check-in agent, another
way to minimize this cost is to use the curbside check-in service still
offered by some of the major airlines at several of the large US
airports. These guys live off tips and a USD20 tip can often avoid the
much higher charge at the inside check-in counter.

PP

dardruba
April 10th 06, 11:30 PM
Just got home from a weeks family outing to Barcelona, Spain. We flew Ryanair to Gerona landed at midnight and ducked into the airport hotel.

Next morning walking round to the cafeteria for breakfast there was a guy on the forecourt unloading his bike from a bikebag. He was there on the way back and I remembered this post. I called out a greeting and asked how much he'd paid to transport the bikebag, 30euros he said from Stanstead. He was going off road in the Pyrenees.

Thats when I noticed his hands, black crap up to his elbows, he'd got a fold back in his chain that he couldnt undo, either insitu or when lifted off the rings. I suggested keep it on the cassette, take it off the chainring, make a triangle hand at the top and bottom and jiggle it. He tried that but no luck, I couldnt see how the jiggle had got flattened in transit.

We were in a hurry to catch the airport bus so I wasn't about to help.
Break the chain, flatten it and belt it, no chainbreaker. Fit the spare, didnt have one. So I left, by then he was really p'd off. At the start of a trip my rings are spotless, I've got 3 chains in use at any one time - one on, one in the cleaner and one cleaned as the spare, he didnt like that so I didnt ask why he'd not cleaned the bike before leaving on an adventure.

If you know the guy would you ask him to post and tell us how he got on.

Simon Cooper
April 11th 06, 05:28 AM
"Scott Gordo" > wrote in message
ups.com...
>
> Simon Cooper wrote:
> > "(PeteCresswell)" > wrote in message
> > ...
> >
> > While that's probably true, I've discovered that buying my tickets with
my
> > American Express automatically qualifies me to travel insurance with no
> > deductable and has a much more generous limit, that I can't remember,
since
> > I haven't lost anything terribly valuable. Broken Kayak paddle the
airline
> > disowned wasn't a problem with them.
> >

> Is that AMEX qualification automatic for all their cards, or is it a
> special program? (It's what I used.)

I'm not sure I can say. Read the little booklet they send you each year
with lots of very small print, and likely one of the sections is
"Complementary Travel Insurance". Just like if you read the VISA one,
you'll find you get free CDW on a rental car if you pay with it...

I expect, from what I've seen that it's a standard AMEX feature.

RobertPerkins
April 26th 06, 02:22 AM
But, Ritchey's default bike box is over the 62" limit. I wonder if
this is a problem in reality. Rob

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