Hi Said, private international shipment and customs is not that problematic to my knowledge and experience, at least between the USA and Europe.
On Sat, 26 May 2007 20:39:23 EDT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > >Hello Rick, > >on the customs issue, you may have to check the items against the commerce >control list (CCL Export Administration Regulation) especially section 3A002 >I >believe. > >Even (or especially!) if they are of "$0" value prototypes. ->->-> That is true for bigger and commercial transfers. Customs would appreciate to get everything done for them, but who as private person does know about this long code list? I found, for private transfers and small numbers of items, specially for not new things of low or no commercial interest, it is ok and sufficient to describe verbally but understandable. Just an example: "used old (cannibalized) oscillator (clock), for (amateur) radio transmitter, unknown state, likely defective, present value USD 8.-- (or: none, scrap, but may evtl. look suspicious)" For transmitters, antennas and their parts as used by amateurs no tax will be collected, just the VAT, which are now 19%, if money is paid for and the value is higher than about $ 25. (Tax is anyway lower In worst case customs may anyway question the declaration and the recipient may then be asked for some clarifications and to open the package, because the persons there are not always familiar with the special nomenclature. Concerning the remark to prototypes: Years after official product launch for the international market, do these not loose their initial high non-material value? ............... > >High-tech items such as this "super-high-tech" oscillator cannot be exported >into all countries w/o export license. You have to check the list, and then >consider each country individually. Usually most western countries do not >present an issue except maybe Israel. ->->-> Isn't it painted a bit too black? Are there on the world's market not devices freely traded, equipped with such but fully qualified new oscillators? How do you define then primary standards as surplus? I would consider other things eg. some special USOs designed for harsh environment or modern precision GPS rx etc. as (more) critical.... ................ > >Fedex for example will ask for a "harmonized code" from the CCL to be >written on the transport paperwork, and will not export it without written >declaration by you. > >The government can be extremely sensitive to this, that's why some companies >like MiniCircuits require a declaration of conformance even when buying and >shipping their parts in the US! ->->-> Maybe true for key technology parts, which are very special and essential for certain very important products for some countries.... ....................... > >It is for example illegal to just sent schematics to China via email without >export license... > >bye, >Said > ........................ from the follow-on mail of Said: >>Just mark them as such: "Gift, value $1" > >then maybe "just" go to jail :) >bye, >Said ->->-> sounds a bit too pessimistic, by the way "Gift" in german does mean "poison" which in fact I would not propose to ship ;-) But in fact, "gift, value $1" would call me to check the contents... regards Arnold Tibus, DK2WT _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list [email protected] https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
