A change was made to the AT101 plate. It now has 1u middle keys on the bottom row. See pic for details.
Added HHKB style plate per the request of some of the members in the IC.
And now for the quote roundup since I slept:
I don't know where in EU you are, but there are several estimates in the FAQ portion for INTL shipping. If you want another country added to that list, let me know.scottc wrote: ↑Okay, before I get too excited... how many American Credits would it cost me to get just one single plate shipped to the EU? The shipping and import fees are completely killing it for me unfortunately, at that price I'd be better off having one manufactured here somewhere which totally sucks.
The difference is that this uses Alps. Build a mountain with your own hands!Spikebolt wrote: ↑I've always been interested in trying out the matias linear switches so this board would be a good way for me.
However if I get a PCB+plate+switches that would be around 80$. Shipping and duties would be around 60$. And I would be missing keycaps (probably I could get an AEK2 ANSI for 20-30$) and a case (no idea here). All summed up comes too close to the 200$ price point for me to consider it :/ And at this point I wonder what's difference from the infinity board after all?
flabbergast wrote: ↑ OK, so here's the reality (speaking for UK, but I think most of the EU countries are similar). We don't pay duty/customs until we hit $200 or thereabouts. However! We do pay VAT (sales tax for you US people), which is about 20%, for anything that has a declared value (including shipping) of about $25 and (here's the kicker) an extra "processing-fee-because-we-can-charge-you-whatever-we-want-and-you-can-do-f**k-all-about-it" which is something between $12-$25 depending largely on luck.
So - if the declared package value would be $20 (shipping cost usually doesn't show up on the envelope/parcel), with the proviso that if it gets damaged or lost it's tough luck for the buyer, then we'd be good. I am loudly *not* suggesting that BlueNalgene should just declare the value to be $20 regardless of the actual value, because that would be tax (and senseless fee) evasion, punishable in most countries by a fine, an eternal condemnation from the authorities, and maybe death of you and your family up to and including aunts (but not uncles!).
The estimates in the FAQ above are based on a $100 dollar estimate. Colluding to engage in tax evasion is a serious offense. I will, in no way, knowingly misrepresent the value of the imported item to your country. Unfortunately, I suffer from occasional bouts of an acute dyslexia where I replace some numbers with the number 20. It is a debilitating illness that I would never make light of. If some values on the customs forms end up being accidentally switched like this as some have requested in private already, it would be entirely by happenstance.Paranoid wrote: ↑Exactly this. Over here, everything over €18 basically costs marginally more. VAT, processing charges, plus the shipping costs. Declaring a lower value or no value would probably solve it. He's not running a business and doesn't need profit ... so just theoretically sell it with a lossflabbergast wrote: ↑ for anything that has a declared value (including shipping) of about $25 and (here's the kicker) an extra "processing-fee-because-we-can-charge-you-whatever-we-want-and-you-can-do-f**k-all-about-it" which is something between $12-$25 depending largely on luck.
That's where the Chinese have the upper hand! Never paid any import fees for any package ^^