Further investigation points to the link between recipient and their mail 
server. Messages from various sources have been recieved
afer a long (days) delay.


  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Bootlebarth
Sent: Wednesday, September 03, 2014 5:15 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [SPAM] Re: [k-9-mail] sending to one address fails (silently) all 
others fine.



On Wednesday, 3 September 2014 16:14:59 UTC+1, Richard wrote: 



> Date: Wednesday, September 03, 2014 07:35:15 -0700 
> From: Bootlebarth <[email protected] <javascript:> > 
> To: [email protected] <javascript:>  
> Subject: [k-9-mail] sending to one address fails (silently) all 
others fine. 
> 
> One out of many addresses fails although it appears in sent items, 
> also reply to this address fails, in both cases there is no 
> indication of failure. The address is [email protected] <javascript:>  which 
> works 
> fine when sending from a desktop using Outlook. What can be going 
> wrong? 

What do you mean by "One out of many addresses fails"? Do messages 
to this address sit in the k9 outbox on your device, or is it that 
they simply aren't delivered to the inbox of the recipient? 

Assuming that the messages aren't sitting in the k9 outbox, do you 
use the same outgoing mail server for both your outlook and k9 mail? 
If these are not the same, the issue may be that the recipient's 
mail environment rates your two outgoing mail servers differently, 
and so your k9 mail may well be falling into the recipient's spam 
boxes, or may simply be being tossed earlier on the recipient's 
side, in a way that doesn't generate delivery rejections. 

If your outgoing mail server settings are the same for outlook and 
k9 it still could be that the recipient's mail environment sees the 
k9 mail signature (which could include cell-data paths) in a less 
desirable way than it does the outlook mail, and so is shunting it 
aside. 

Assuming you don't have access to the mail logs for the outgoing 
mail server you use for k9, I would suggest, as a start, that the 
recipient check their spam mail box to see if things are getting 
delivered there. 

By the way, once a message has been accepted by a mail client's 
outgoing mail server the mail client isn't the one that would/should 
generate the non-delivery report. That should come from either the 
outgoing mail server (e.g., on delayed delivery failure) or the 
recipient's mail server. 


    - Richard 



Messages just vanish. The mail server is the same for both (and also a zen 
server). Other mails to zen customers (via a domain
forwarding service) are fine 




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