Cant tell you Bullantmm
No matter what I do, I just cannot get the Australia Post plug-in to work properly. I have tried countless products and variations to test it, and I just can't figure out how the plug-in is calculating. Nothing every compares to the Australia Post calculator online or to their hard copy postcode range/prices list.
And then there is the thing with Australia Post where if you get a box that is say 50cm long x 40cm wide x 11cm high with some stock in it, take it into an Aust Post Office, they weigh it and give you the price. But then they tell you that if it wasn't shaped like a rectangular box but was in fact irregular, it would be a cheaper price. So now I get my stock and I pack it in the same box, but then get some bubble wrap and place it in the middle before I seal up the box so that it makes a bulge in the middle. It's amazing the price difference.
Wonder if any online shop calculators could allow for that. Maybe a tick box saying Irregular Shape Box so that the calculations are different.
I found the following forum post on Flying sole website - maybe this will help if someone fixes up the Hika Aust Post plug-in.
........., but I know that the Australia Post calculator will use the weight or the cubic volume, whichever is greater in its calculation.
The way we approach it is that all items in the cart are added up and the total weight is submitted to the calculator as a single package with minimum dimensions so we always get a shipping calculation based on the total weight of all the items the customer is purchasing.
This is fine in most cases, but sometimes our customers have bulky items, so they have a way of configuring such items as "bulky" and providing the dimensions of these items.
When the customer orders bulky items, all the items in the cart are split up into non-bulky items, with the shipping being calculated as the total weight of the item, and all the bulky items being treated as separate parcels using either the weight or the dimensions of the item as appropriate. Finally all the shipping estimates from Australia Post are added up and that's the final amount that gets presented to the customer.
We also have additional configuration options that allow the store owner to add additional handling days onto the delivery estimate from Australia Post, and they can also add additional handling fees as a flat amount or as a percentage of the total shipping rate.
All in all, this seems to deal with the vexing problem of shipping rate calculations.