I got a lesson from UPS on how they track packages. I bought some once fired brass from a guy in Texas. He shipped it and sent me the tracking numbers. It supposedly took two days to get from Texas to Kentucky. Then it sat in my hometown UPS until I called 3 days later. When I asked about it and they really delved into what happened. Once that package is assigned a pallet, the tracking number on the pallet is all that is scanned. They don't scan every package, at all the stops along the way, just the pallet, or semi trailer in some instances. My package fell off the pallet somewhere in Texas. It somehow showed up in sort facility in Miami. I guess it stayed on the plane until someone saw it. The whole time I was "tracking" the package, all I was really tracking was the pallet it was originally put on.
Just food for thought when watching your package travel across the country.
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