Posted by Robin Graham on 02/03/2021 03:11:06:
… UK .gov website tells me that there will be no Customs Duty as the value is under £139, and VAT is payed by the seller. Another (not .gov) website tells me that China has no mechanism for paying VAT and I'll get stung for it at some point. Can anyone who has bought from Banggood advise as to what actually happens?
The 32 piece metric set is advertised as being grade 0 which, as I understand it, is inspection grade – sub-micron accuracy. That seems crazy for the price. …
Robin
I think you will have to take the risk and buy one to find out!
With regard to the accuracy of the slip gauges, I've no idea how much they cost to make today. When Mr Johansson first cracked how to make them in 1896 the process was labour intensive. Grinding to size and confirming dimensional accuracy were both slow, skilled, manual processes and making gauges was expensive.
In the 1920's the UK National Physical Laboratory developed another way of making them, and no doubt other industrial nations tackled the problem too. Slip gauges got cheaper but because of the need to assure accuracy using manual methods, they were still expensive.
Today automated high-precision grinding is commonplace. Conceivably slip gauges could be mass-produced rather cheaply, not least because accuracy can be achieved directly by laser controlled machines. Or the seller could be faking them by gluing old Coke cans together!
My guess is the precision grinding is more likely than the latter, but they might not truly be Grade 0, and having them checked would cost more than the set! Does it matter? I suspect most home workshops don't need Slip Gauges which means you can buy a battered inaccurate second-hand set or an iffy new set and still be happy! In my workshop I work to about (about 0.02mm / 1 thou), which isn't demanding by tool-room standards. As my home-workshop 'gauges' only have to be slightly better than normal workshop tooling, there's no particular reason for me to go high-end.
Buying online is always a gamble, and confirming you can get your money back in the event it goes wrong is the name of the game, not fretting about 'quality'. Amazon seem to be best at refunds, ebay are mostly OK, but other overseas online sellers might not be so helpful! That said, lots of people buy successfully from Banggood, although not everyone.
Bad time to ask about Customs Duty & VAT! Three things muddy the water :
- We left the EU in January and the new border introduced new controls and extra costs. Difficult to judge exactly what's going on, but there's certain amount of turbulance at the moment, for various reasons. For example, goods destined for the UK were often consigned in an EU bound container to, say Rotterdam, and distributed freely across the EU from there. Now the UK element has to be transshipped over a border, with additional paperwork and duties etc. Likely to be a while before such Supply Chain difficulties are fixed, and importer/exporters streamline the process.
- Covid restrictions are also causing large-scale supply difficulties.
- Coincidentally in January, the UK changed the way VAT is collected on imports and altered the rules. It seems that Amazon and ebay are collecting tax correctly, but it's not clear that other sellers are! At the end of the day the customer is responsible for paying VAT, and if it's not been pre-paid by the seller on his behalf, tax might be collected on delivery plus collections charges, which can be painful. I say might because I don't believe the authorities are fully enforcing the change yet, and certainly aren't checking every package.
So its all about risk. In the worst case a dud set of goods arrive with a demand for Customs Duty, VAT and hefty handling charges. In practice most people get what they wanted most of the time and aren't whacked for more money. My daughter buys lots of stuff from abroad and although she had to cough last week that was unusual. She is careful not to buy high-value items.
Another problem at the moment is stuff not being available at all. My nephew is building a computer for me at the moment and about a third of the components ordered have resulted in 'Delayed Order Notifications'. It's not just one supplier – most of his favourite suppliers are 'Out of Stock' to some degree or other. No idea what's causing it, or if shortages are peculiar to imported computer parts.
Dave