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中国邮政-国际EMS快递邮件重量、尺寸限制标准

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资费区通达国家(地区)限重(千克)尺寸限制(米)
一区香港40标准1
澳门31.5标准2
二区日本30标准3
韩国、蒙古30标准1
朝鲜30标准2
三区马来西亚40标准1
印度尼西亚30标准4
新加坡、泰国、柬埔寨、越南30标准1
菲律宾20标准2
四区澳大利亚、新西兰30标准2
巴布亚新几内亚25标准1
五区英国、希腊、瑞士、德国、瑞典、法国30标准1
爱尔兰、比利时、意大利标准1
丹麦、挪威、芬兰、奥地利31.5标准1
卢森堡31标准1
西班牙、马耳他20标准1
葡萄牙30标准2
六区美国31.5标准2
加拿大30标准1
七区斯里兰卡、土耳其、老挝30标准1
巴基斯坦30标准2
尼泊尔31.5标准2
孟加拉20标准1
印度35标准1
八区圭亚那、巴拿马、密鲁30标准1
巴西、古巴30标准2
墨西哥、哥伦比亚20标准1
阿根廷20标准2
九区约旦、阿曼、乍得、刚果、加纳、马里加蓬、科威特、突尼斯、乌干达、摩洛哥、吴旺达、科特迪瓦、塞内加尔、莫桑比克尼日利亚、马达加斯加、埃塞俄比亚30标准1
巴林、埃及、以色列、叙利亚、吉布提、卡塔尔、几内亚、博茨瓦纳20标准1
伊朗6标准1
阿联酋、肯尼亚、尼日尔31.5标准1
塞浦路斯、布基纳法索
十区捷克、俄罗斯、克罗地亚、爱沙尼亚30标准1
拉脱维亚、哈塞克斯坦30标准2
波兰、乌克兰、白俄罗斯、开曼群岛20标准1
匈牙利31.5标准1
罗马尼亚31.5标准2

标准1:任何一边的尺寸都不得超过1.5米,长度和长度以外的最大横周合计不得超过3米。

标准2:任何一边的尺寸都不得超过1.05米,长度和长度以外的做大横周合计不得超过2米。

标准3:东京、大阪指定区域为1.8米*3米,其他地区执行标准1。

标准4:最长一边不得超过0.6米,长、宽、高合计不得超过0.9米。圆卷型长度不得超过0.9米,直径的两倍和长度合计不得超过1.04米。


〖曾经〗☆→梦了→愛了→痛了→醒了☆
【如今】☆→傷了→纍了→儍了→怕了☆
〖现在〗☆→断了→忘了→分了→算了☆
〖生活〗☆→坠落→失落→破落→堕落☆
┏我们┓要學会ξ忘情Φ忘愛※忘悲傷Ю
EMS尺寸规定(仅参考,其实1.5米内都可以走的 )





重 量 限 度
1.每件限重30千克。
2.内装易碎或流质物品的,每件限重10千克   信函类长度不小于324毫米,宽度不小于229毫米。 文件资料类 可用两层以上坚韧的牛皮纸包封或装入坚韧的包装袋、起墙袋交寄。厚度不超过100毫米,长度不得小于215毫米,宽度不得小于130毫米。 物品类 纸质包装箱,长度不准超过1500毫米,长度和长度以外最大横周合计不超过3000毫米。 特殊物品需用圆卷形包装时,长度不小于300毫米,直径不小于60毫米。长度与直径的2倍合计不超过1500毫米。
封 装 要 求
文 件 类
1.信封粘合处要牢固,在运输过程中不开裂。
2.厚度超过100毫米的文件资料,应用大小适用的邮政包装箱封装,并填充妥当。
3.需要捆扎的邮件,应先装特快专递邮件,详情单牢固地粘贴在邮件上,再行捆扎。
物 品 类
1.除平整形纺织品及细小物品可装入标准特快信封内寄递外,一律采用邮政专用包装箱。
2.油腻、腥味和容易反潮的物品应先用塑料袋妥为封装,用热封压口(或用其他方法密封),再用邮政专用包装箱包装。
3.易碎物品,封装时应在内件之间及内件与箱板之间用柔软、轻质的填充物填塞妥当。
4.流质和易溶化物品以及着色干粉,应装入完全密封的容器内。再装入邮政专用包装箱,箱内要用吸附性强的填充物填塞妥当,以备容器破损时能把流质吸尽或避免流出。

〖曾经〗☆→梦了→愛了→痛了→醒了☆
【如今】☆→傷了→纍了→儍了→怕了☆
〖现在〗☆→断了→忘了→分了→算了☆
〖生活〗☆→坠落→失落→破落→堕落☆
┏我们┓要學会ξ忘情Φ忘愛※忘悲傷Ю
EMS邮件按实际重量计费,按国家区分每件重量和尺寸的限度,(分区表严格按照EMS官方网站公布为准,此表格内的分区国家是指重量和尺寸有特别限制的国家,另请特别注意:我司不同渠道EMS限制标准请详细参照我司报价表备注)。

见下表:

资费区

通达国家

(地区)

最高限重
(千克)

最大尺寸限制

最大长度限制(米)

长度和长度以外最大横周合计限制(米)

一区

香港

30

1.2

3

澳门

30

1.05

2.5

二区

日本

30

1.2

3

韩国

30

1.2

3

朝鲜民主主义共和国

30

1.05

2

蒙古

30

1.2

3

三区

马来西亚

30

1.2

3

新加坡

30

1.2

3

泰国

30

1.2

3

越南

30

1.2

3

柬埔寨

20

1.2

3

四区

澳大利亚

20

1.05

2

新西兰

20

1.05

2

巴布亚新几内亚

20

1.05

2

五区

比利时

30

1.2

3

丹麦

30

1.2

3

英国

30

1.2

3

芬兰

30

1.2

3

希腊

25

1.2

3

爱尔兰

30

1.2

3

意大利

30

1.2

3

卢森堡

30

1.2

3

马耳他

20

1.2

3

挪威

30

1.2

3

葡萄牙

30

1.05

2

瑞士

30

1.2

3

德国

30

1.2

3

荷兰

30

1.2

3

瑞典

35

1.2

3

法国

30

1.2

3

六区

美国

30

1.2

2.75

加拿大

30

1.2

3

七区

尼泊尔

20

1.05

2

老挝

30

1.2

3

巴基斯坦

30

1.05

2

斯里兰卡

30

1.2

3

土耳其

20

1.05

2

八区

巴西

30

1.05

2

古巴

30

1.05

2

圭亚那

30

1.2

3

九区

约旦

30

1.2

3

伊朗

6

1.0

3

伊拉克

20

1.2

3

以色列

20

1.2

3

科威特

20

1.05

2

叙利亚

30

1.2

3

科特迪瓦

30

1.2

3

吉布提

20

1.2

3

肯尼亚

30

1.2

3

马达加斯加

30

1.05

2

阿曼

30

1.05

2

卡塔尔

20

1.05

2

塞内加尔

20

1.05

2

突尼斯

20

1.05

2

阿联酋

20

1.05

2

巴林

20

1.2

3

乌干达

20

1.05

2

十区

捷克

20

1.05

2

俄罗斯

30

1.2

3

拉脱维亚

30

1.2

3

哈沙克斯坦

30

1.2

3

白俄罗斯

20

1.2

3

开曼群岛

20

1.2

3

注:内装易碎物品或物质流物品的国际EMS件,每件限重10千克。

〖曾经〗☆→梦了→愛了→痛了→醒了☆
【如今】☆→傷了→纍了→儍了→怕了☆
〖现在〗☆→断了→忘了→分了→算了☆
〖生活〗☆→坠落→失落→破落→堕落☆
┏我们┓要學会ξ忘情Φ忘愛※忘悲傷Ю
如何用ems来控制文本大小(英文原文) Text for the screen is sized with CSS in terms of pixels, ems or keywords. As most of us know, sizing with pixels is easy: get your selector and give it a font-size – no more thought required. Sizing with keywords is more complicated and requires a few workarounds, but you’re in luck as the techniques are well documented. That leaves ems. At this point people often leg it. ‘Ems are too inconsistent,’ they say, ‘they’re too hard; they never work.’ Well that may be the received wisdom, but if ever the was a case of FUD then this is it. I will now attempt to show you how ems can be as quick and easy to use as pixels.  

Why ems?
  

If the world were an ideal place, we’d all use pixels. But it’s not, we have the broken browser to contend with. IE/Win will not allow readers to resize text that has been sized in pixels. Like it or not, your readers will want to resize text at some point. Perhaps they are short-sighted, doing a presentation, using a ridiculously high resolution laptop or simply have tired eyes. So unless you know (not think) your audience won’t be using IE/Win or will never wish to resize their text then pixels are not yet a viable solution.  
Keyword-based text sizing will allow all browsers to resize text so this is a possibility, but I don’t find it gives me the precision that pixels would give me. Using ems however, allows all browsers to resize text and also provides pixel-level precision and so they tend to be my unit of choice.  

Get on with it  

OK let’s dive into ems. I’ll show you, from scratch, how to size text in a document using ems. I’ll assume throughout that we are dealing with a browser set to ‘medium’ text. The default size for ‘medium’ text in all modern browsers is 16px. Our first step is to reduce this size for the entire document by setting body size to 62.5%:  
BODY {font-size:62.5%}  
This takes 16px down to 10px which I’m using purely because it’s a nice round number for example purposes – 10px text is too small for the real world. From now on it’s easy to think in pixels but still set sizes in terms of ems: 1em is 10px, 0.8em is 8px, 1.6em is 16px, etc. If you are laying out your document using CSS (which you are, right?) then you have probably used a few divs to group together elements. Apply text-size to these divs and your job is almost done. Consider a two column layout with header and footer:  
<body>  
<div id="navigation"> ... </div>  
<div id="main_content"> ... </div>  
<div id="side_bar"> ... </div>  
<div id="footer"> ... </div>  
</body>  

#navigation {font-size:1em}  
#main_content {font-size:1.2em}  
#side_bar {font-size:1em}  
#footer {font-size:0.9em}  

So this would give us a document where text in the navigation and side bar is displayed at 10px, the main content is 12px and the footer is 9px. There now remains a few anomalies to sort out (you’d have to do this even if you were sizing in pixels). In Mozilla-based browsers, all heading elements in our aforementioned #main_content div will be displayed at 12px whether they are an H1 or an H6, whereas other browsers show the headings at different sizes as expected. Applying text-sizes to all headings will give consistency across browsers, for example:  
H1 {font-size:2em}  /* displayed at 24px */  
H2 {font-size:1.5em}  /* displayed at 18px */  
H3 {font-size:1.25em}  /* displayed at 15px */  
H4 {font-size:1em}  /* displayed at 12px */  

A similar job needs to be done on forms and tables to force form controls and table cells to inherit the correct size (mainly to cater for IE/Win):  
INPUT, SELECT, TH, TD {font-size:1em}  
And so to the final tweak and the bit folks seem to find most tricky: dealing with nested elements. We’ve already touched upon it with our headers, but for now let’s look more closely at what’s going on. First of all we changed our body text to 10px; 62.5% of its default size:  
16 x 0.625 = 10  
Then we said our main content should be displayed at 12px. If we did nothing, the #main_content div would be displayed at 10px because it would inherit its size from the body element – its parent. This implies that we always size text relative to the parent element when using ems:  
child pixels / parent pixels = child ems  
12 / 10 = 1.2  

Next we wanted our h1 heading to be 24px. The parent to our h1 is the main_content div which we know to be 12px in size. To get our headings to be 24px we need to double that so our ems are:  
24 / 12 = 2  
And so it goes on. Tricky stuff occurs where rules like this are applied:  
#main_content LI {font-size:0.8333em}  
This rule implies that all main content list items should be displayed at 10px. We use the same straight forward maths to achieve this:  
10 / 12 = 0.8333  
But what happens when one list contains another? It gets smaller. Why? Because our rule actually says that any list item in the #main_content div should 0.8333 times the size of its parent. So we need another rule to prevent this ‘inherited shrinkage’:  
LI LI {font-size:1em}  
This says that any list item inside another list item should be the same size as its parent (the other list item). I normally use a whole set of child selectors to prevent confusion during development:  
LI LI, LI P, TD P, BLOCKQUOTE P {font-size:1em}  
And that’s it. When sizing text in ems there’s really one rule to remember: size text relative to its parent and use this simple calculation to do so:  
child pixels / parent pixels = child ems  
Some helpful tools  
Pixy’s list computed styles is fabulous bookmarklet which shows the cascade of calculated font sizes (or any other CSS property). Mozilla’s DOM Inspector is even more powerful as it allows you to see which CSS rules are affecting any given element in order of cascade priority so you can see why your text is or isn’t changing size when you expected it to.  
If you’re finding the maths all a bit complex, try using Riddle’s handy em calculator.  
And finally… what is an em?  

Classically, an em (pronounced emm) is a typographer’s unit of horizontal spacing and is a sliding (relative) measure. One em is a distance equal to the text size. In 10 pixel type, an em is 10 pixels; in 18 pixel type it is 18 pixels. Thus 1em of padding is proportionately the same in any text size.

〖曾经〗☆→梦了→愛了→痛了→醒了☆
【如今】☆→傷了→纍了→儍了→怕了☆
〖现在〗☆→断了→忘了→分了→算了☆
〖生活〗☆→坠落→失落→破落→堕落☆
┏我们┓要學会ξ忘情Φ忘愛※忘悲傷Ю
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