The Post Office won't post a watch. Ridiculous?

The Post Office won't post a watch. Ridiculous?

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BoomerPride

Original Poster:

4,016 posts

264 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
My wife went to the post office this morning to send a parcel containing a wrist watch as a present. The lady at the counter was adamant that they couldn't accept it because it contained a watch with a battery inside! I thought this was ridiculous. Am I right?

She went to another post office intending to say it was a silver bracelet inside. Seems fair enough to me. But the nearest post office was in the middle of a power cut. So she is now driving around in the rain to find another PO.

I have done some Googling but can't find anything saying you can't send a watch from a post office.

What are your thoughts PHers?


Richard-390a0

2,572 posts

98 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
It's the battery that's the issue. It's on the list of things you can't send attached to every post office counter around near where I live.

https://www.postoffice.co.uk/mail/what-can-i-send

craig1912

3,693 posts

119 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
The PO is wrong if you are sending in the UK. You can send a watch with a battery inside. In fact I’m waiting one being delivered this morning after sending it off for repair.
Sent cameras and all sorts with batteries in.

BoomerPride

Original Poster:

4,016 posts

264 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
I believe Craig's answer to be the correct one. If the battery is fitted to the device then it is fine.

JimbobVFR

2,727 posts

151 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
Richard-390a0 said:
It's the battery that's the issue. It's on the list of things you can't send attached to every post office counter around near where I live.

https://www.postoffice.co.uk/mail/what-can-i-send
Which specifically makes an exception for a battery in a device. "Not connected to or posted with the device it is intended to power"

Mr Pointy

11,817 posts

166 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
Richard-390a0 said:
It's the battery that's the issue. It's on the list of things you can't send attached to every post office counter around near where I live.

https://www.postoffice.co.uk/mail/what-can-i-send
If you read the list you posted a link to you will see that devices that have batteries inside them are specifically allowed.

BoomerPride

Original Poster:

4,016 posts

264 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
I've sent a complaint about this particular post office counter. It's not a big deal in the great scheme of things but it may save others incurring cost and inconvenience.

BrettMRC

4,450 posts

167 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
A similar thing comes up from time to time when posting air rifles.

Perfectly legal to send a sub12 via Parcelforce 48, but from time to time you get counter operators who refuse it.

mickythefish

962 posts

13 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
It feels that stasi interrogation every time you go to post something. I just lie.

Richard-390a0

2,572 posts

98 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
Mr Pointy said:
Richard-390a0 said:
It's the battery that's the issue. It's on the list of things you can't send attached to every post office counter around near where I live.

https://www.postoffice.co.uk/mail/what-can-i-send
If you read the list you posted a link to you will see that devices that have batteries inside them are specifically allowed.
Yes I'm aware of that, but it's the mindset of some P.O counter staff who may not be interested in learning the ins & outs of their job role & just point an accusing finger to the poster on the counter of every P.O I've been in which says 'batteries are a restricted item' or whatever it says & send the customer away as the O/P has found. rolleyes

untakenname

5,050 posts

199 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
Could say the watch is mechanical, seems like they are just covering themselves in case of fire even though the battery will weigh a couple of grams and be a 1.5v button cell.

bigpriest

1,799 posts

137 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
untakenname said:
Could say the watch is mechanical, seems like they are just covering themselves in case of fire even though the battery will weigh a couple of grams and be a 1.5v button cell.
I think it was implemented via airline legislation but irrelevant in this case.

Just get a copy of the proper list from the website link and take it with you to show the fool in the Post Office. Nothing better than proving a fool is a fool. Or just say "jewellery" which technically isn't a lie.

hilly10

7,306 posts

235 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
Just say it’s a Watch and it’s mechanical, meaning no battery end of

BoomerPride

Original Poster:

4,016 posts

264 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
I took it to another post office, said it was a wrist watch, and no further questions were asked. It's on its way

vikingaero

11,189 posts

176 months

Wednesday 16th October
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I can't be bothered with all this interrogation, so anything I send is just "a book", even if it is really just a book!

soad

33,443 posts

183 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
mickythefish said:
It feels that stasi interrogation every time you go to post something. I just lie.
I posted beer cans as candles, numerous times. hehe

Well wrapped and packaged - so won’t puncture/leak, and it’s a decent imported tipple. wink

Not for profit, to a family member.

soad

33,443 posts

183 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
Sold a cheap watch on eBay earlier this month, zero issues posting it. Only had to confirm value.

Postage has gone up this month too.

KAgantua

4,240 posts

138 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
Always makes me laugh when they ask whats inside 'for safety purposes'

Yeah, if im a terrorist im going to say 'its a bomb' - no ill just say it's a book.

The stasi comment is bang on - no wonder PO is being creamed by it's rivals

Nigel_O

3,057 posts

226 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
Could be worse….

I posted a rare car part a few years ago. PO counter bod asked me what was in the parcel - I said it was ‘a car part’. They asked what car part - I replied is was a ‘brand new cam cover for a 1998 Fiat’. PO took my money (including extra cost to insure the £300 value) and then proceeded to use the parcel as a football, resulting in it being cracked on arrival.

When I claimed, they said ‘we don’t cover car parts’…..

CHLEMCBC

407 posts

24 months

Wednesday 16th October
quotequote all
Just use Evri