What is Mailbag?
Mailbag is a housing that is designed to keep the mail safely while protecting it from the elements. Mailbags can be used to ship and handling the mail, in which case they are sometimes known as Mail Sacks and can also take the form of bags on the shoulders wearing post delivery. Many legal mandates surround the use of postal cars and in many cultures there are etiquette on postal races similar to the rules that surround the mail itself; For example, scratching via the postal gate is illegal in many countries, except that it is considered gross. Usually, the contents of the postal vehicle are sorted and the outside of the bag is marked by mail to which it should be directed and ensures that once the postal law is packed and sealed, it will not have to be reopened. When Mailbags arrives at their final goal, the postal staff breaks the seal, sort the mail along the route, and then delivers it.
Businesses that receive a high volume of mail, such as newspapers, may have a special agreement with the post office that allows them to receive their mail in bags, usually class by class. These companies have their own postal rooms, with civilian employees who sort postal bags and direct mail to the relevant department.
Because the post office is federally protected in many countries, the security of postal cars is paramount. Usually, they can only be processed with authorized work staff and in many cases postal shipments are protected when they are in open areas to ensure that ordinary civilians cannot access them. Many postal codes have barcodes that can be scanned in every step of their journey for monitoring, and if Mailbag contains a registered mail or mail with special manipulation instructions, special special care will be given.
In the sense of a bag transported by a postal carrier, the postal vehicle is much smaller but still very robust, with wideA strap to distribute the weight of the mail. Mailbags can be moved across the shoulder to the route on foot and some postal carriers carry postal vehicles in their vehicles to park, load the mail by post and walk on part of their route to get exercises and save it. Postal bags are also popular with non-postpostal staff because of their robustness.