Differences:
- The Handling charge would be used alongside the Flat Rate Shipping. It simply adds a single charge once the basket falls between or is heavier than the specified weight range. You can only specify 1 weight range and charge.
- The Weight Table Based Shipping would replace the Flat Rate Shipping. It allows more control via multiple weight ceilings (ranges). You can specify as many weight ranges and charges as you need.
We just keyed in the weight of the heavy products, although we do plan to get through adding weights to all. This at least allowed us to take care of the heavy products.
If you have a heavy product (12lbs) and a light product (0.00lbs (no wieght entered)), the shipping charge will be based on the heavier product since the total wieght of the basket is now 12lbs.
This is why the Weight Table Based Shipping allows for more control.
Weight Table Example:
You first set an initial base rate (flat rate) and then add weight ceilings and charges.
As the basket gets "heavier", the shipping charge will go up by increments you set based on the weight ceilings.
Code | Method | Handling (base rate $) | Ceiling (weight lbs) | Charge (added to base rate $) |
01_UPS_Ground | UPS Ground | 18.95 | ||
11.99 | 0.00 (total rate 0 - 11.99 lbs: $18.95) | |||
23.99 | 11.00 (total rate 12 - 23.99 lbs: $29.95) | |||
+ (24lbs and up) | 21.00 (total rate 24lbs +: $39.95) |
You can set as many of these weight ceilings and charges as you want for each of your shipping methods.
So if a customer has multiple heavy products in the basket, say two 12 pound products, the shipping rate would fall into the 24lbs + rate.
Once you add the rest of your product weights it would work in the same manner. If you have twelve 1 pound products, the shipping rate would fall into the 12 - 23.99lbs rate.
Hopefully this helps explain things a little more clearly.
Cheers,
Nick
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