Six transporters compete to deliver goods, with the driver making the most profit and the best feedback crowned `Transporter of the Week.' In the first episode, Stu and Jemma move three sports cars from East Sussex to a charity event in London, while father-and-son duo Raymond and Grant get to grips with their load of 300,000 live bees worth £1350, which need to be relocated from Essex to King's Lynn
Rolf and Rachel move a professional wrestling ring worth £3000 from Essex to the South West of France. Raymond and Grant have to deal with an escaped bee while Stu and Jemma run into a few problems whilst attempting to load the precious sports cars.
Russell transports a 1964 Landrover and an armoured Humber truck 76 miles from Oxford to Herefordshire. Raymond and Grant have to deal with some very angry bees on their journey to King's Lynn.
Rolf and Rachel have to deal with some navigational problems whilst Stu and Jemma stop traffic on a one-way street in the middle of London.
Rolf and Rachel finally make their way to France but the the wrestlers aren't happy. At the end of the show this week's winners are revealed.
Laurie transports two hand-carved wooden sculptures worth £10,000. Picking up in east London, one needs to be moved to Buckinghamshire and the other driven to Durham. She sets off late and has an awkward moment when one of the artworks is harmed. Raymond and Grant are given the job of transporting a Canadian canoe from Cheshire to St Andrews, Scotland, but disaster strikes when the cargo becomes damaged in transit
Shahbaz is the winning bidder of the fragile art collection which needs hauling 385 miles from Market Harborough to Paris. Raymond and Grant pick up extra items en route, including a trampoline and some polo shirts. Shahbaz also tries to increase his profit by picking up an African instrument, a vintage sideboard and six antique chairs. Laurie eventually delivers one of the Gruffalos 17 hours late, and Raymond and Grant drop off the trampoline.
Stu and Jemma win the contract to ship a 20 foot sail boat worth £4000 from Cornwall to North Yorkshire. Laurie sets off on the final leg of her Gruffalo run, while Raymond and Grant take extra precautions to protect the canoe, and pick up some kilt material in Edinburgh on their way.
Still on the road, Raymond and Grant deal with a puncture as they race against the clock to deliver their canoe and side loads on time. Shahbaz is in France en route to Paris. He has already received five star feedback from dropping off the African musical instrument and the vintage sideboard, but disaster strikes.
In France, Shahbaz is in serious danger of missing his delivery deadline after his van is towed and he has to transfer the loads into another vehicle. Stu and Jemma are concerned that their boat is not secure. After a tense week, four loads are completed - but only one driver can be crowned 'Transporter of the Week'.
The six transporters bid on a bronze statue worth 95,000 pounds which needs moving 65 miles from Surrey to Hertfordshire. Shahbaz is selected, despite placing the highest bid. He ropes in a family helper for the job to move the irreplaceable load, but gets a shock when he takes a closer look at the listing. Stu and Jemma win the second load: five bespoke beach huts worth 50,000 pounds which must be transported 284 miles from Hampshire to St Annes-on-Sea in Lancashire. It's a complicated job, but Stu and Jemma take it on boldly. Will it be plain sailing?
Russell embraces his charitable side when he bids for 15 unique giraffe artworks worth £75,000. He wins the job of transporting the herd 65 miles, from London to Colchester Zoo.
A steel horse sculpture worth 95,000 pounds needs to be moved 96 miles from Hampshire to the prestigious Chelsea Flower Show in London. Russell continues gathering his herd of giraffes in London and ends up spending a night sleeping at the zoo.
With the steel horse on board, Laurie boldly picks up a side load en route to the Chelsea Flower Show. It will boost her profit, but if anything goes wrong it could compromise her feedback. Russell wakes up at Colchester Zoo, and the giraffes are given a once over by zoo director Tony. For this charitable job, feedback is everything - has Russell done enough to get faultless feedback? Stu and Jemma battle the elements as the beach huts are unloaded on the seafront in St Annes-on-Sea.
On her way to drop the steel horse sculpture at the Chelsea Flower show, Laurie comes up against heavy rush hour traffic, which threatens to delay the delivery and jeopardise her fee and feedback. As Russell oversees the unloading of each of the 15 giraffe artworks at Colchester Zoo, will Zoo director Tony be happy with the delivery? With all four loads now complete, who will be crowned Transporter of the Week?
The transporters bid on a handcrafted shepherd's hut worth £10,000, and which needs moving 40 miles from West Felton in Shropshire to Llanwnog in Powys. Plus, Shahbaz finally arrives in Kent with the tuk-tuk, but unloading it proves more difficult than anticipated
Raymond and Grant arrive with a bang on the Isle of Wight armed with the swan pedalo, and Laurie misses her deadline for three hovercrafts when she hits Friday night traffic on the M25. Meanwhile Russell struggles to get the ramps on his trailer to co-operate at the Shepherds Hut pick-up, and his situation worsens when he gets lost in the Welsh borders
Laurie arrives two and a half hours late to drop off the three hovercraft and gets into a sticky situation reversing in the yard. Will her customer make her pay for her lateness? In Wales, things get tense for Russell when he unloads the shepherd's hut using a tractor under the gaze of buyer Mike. After all four deliveries have been completed it's time to find out who will be crowned `transporter of the week'.
A mixture of highlights from past episodes and new footage, as delivery drivers race to transport strange cargo. Truckers Laurie, Raymond, Grant, Stu and Jemma have to contend with giant statues of the Gruffalo carved from solid wood, a 20-foot sailing boat and a shipment of 300,000 live bees
The return of the programme in which delivery drivers compete against one another. Russell secures a collection of tropical trees that need moving from Gloucestershire to Kent, while Phil grapples with a dragon statue that requires transporting 213 miles from Altrincham, Cheshire, to Skewen in south Wales. Are Phil and Russell in with a chance of winning 'Transporter of the Week'?
Horse-mad trucker Laurie is selected for the job of transporting a bespoke horse carriage 400 miles from West Sussex to an idyllic rural location in France. Meanwhile, Phil and Kevin get caught up on a detour to collect a grandfather clock in Gainsborough. Will they jeopardise their full fee?
Husband and wife team Dave and Jenny move a collection of 19th-century stained glass windows nearly 200 miles, while Phil and `Mad Dog' unload the wooden dragon
Dave and Jenny hit the road with some stained-glass windows, and decide to add an extra load in the shape of a giant fish sculpture. But they struggle to get it into the van
Dave and Jenny deliver the giant fish sculpture to an expectant crowd and finally drop off the stained-glass windows. Then it is time to discover the the winner of Transporter of the Week
Part-time wrestler and van driver Phil wins the bid to transport six boxes of live crayfish. Shahbaz's load is two grand pianos worth thousands.
Russell must transport a motor rickshaw worth ú10,000 from Axminster in Devon to Hamilton, Scotland. In London, Shahbaz must somehow load up a second grand piano.
Father and son team Raymond and Grant are transporting four giant illuminated letters spelling LOVE from Southampton to Kirkcaldy. To boost their profit they take on a side load, but it ends up costing them an extra night in a hotel.
Raymond and Grant collect a side load of live crabs headed for an aquarium in Ellesmere Port. And Russell stops off in Lancashire to pick up side load of theatre chairs.
Raymond and Grant take on an antique table as a second side load to boost their week's profit. And with all four loads completed, which driver wins the prize as 'Transporter of the Week'?
Former big rigger turned van driver Jemma transports a classic kit car, while Phil 'The Man Van' takes the law into his own hands, transporting a criminally light supersize polystyrene padlock.
Trucking couple Bev and Graham have three vintage Airstream caravans that need to be transported, and Phil 'The Man Van' aims to get a valuable supersize padlock to New Scotland Yard before his deadline runs out.
Dave and Jenny, aka 'the loader and the loafer' need to transport a handcrafted rowing boat worth ú750, and Bev and Graham arrive at their first Airstream drop off - but there are tensions over unloading methods.
With two loads delivered and two on the road, the title of 'Transporter of the Week' is still up for grabs. With the hand-built rowing boat on board, Dave and Jenny are taking on a side load. After a money-saving overnight in a truck stop, Bev and Graham head to collect the second caravan.
In the final show this week, three loads have been delivered and just one is still on the road. Dave and Jenny's side-load of goat furniture is precariously balanced around the pristine hand-built rowing boat. Who will win the coveted prize and title 'Transporter of the Week'?
Stu and Jemma win the first load of the week and take a giant dinosaur statue worth £10,000 from Wells in Somerset to Weston-super-Mare, while Russell gets to grips with a three-ton houseboat, transporting it from Liverpool to Nuneaton
Raymond and Grant transport a vintage £27,000 Triumph Roadster almost 1,000 miles from Livingston, Scotland to Plestin-les-Greves in France
Laurie ships an eight tonne army tank from Grantham to Bristol - however, she must first get it to fit inside her trailer
Raymond and Grant arrive in France with their precious load of a restored vintage car, while Laurie is still battling with the army tank
All the loads are delivered, and the announcement as who is to be crowned `Transporter of the Week' eagerly awaited by everyone concerned
Phil calls on his old friend Kevin to help transport a batch of delicate fairy-tale cakes and a giant chair valued at £10,000 to the set of BBC One's The Great British Bake Off
Veteran truckers Bev and Graham are tasked with moving a 1960s Soviet trolleybus from South Yorkshire to the Suffolk coast
Stu and Jemma agree to transport a collection of classic rally cars to Spain, while Shahbaz wrestles with some odd-shaped vintage fairground props for a photo shoot
Bev and Graham hand-deliver a fire pit in the middle of a massive paintball battle, while Stu and Jemma continue to Spain with their load of classic rally cars
Stu and Jemma reach Spain with the classic rally cars, but they also want to be crowned Transporter of the Week.
Raymond and Grant move a 500kg wooden bear carving from Co Durham to Oxfordshire, while Bev and Graham take a 13ft-high dinosaur sculpture to a golf course in south Wales
Cameras follow Phil as he moves a £26,000 winged angel statue 28 miles, from London's Mayfair to a restoration workshop in Surrey
Russell transports two carnival bulls and eight horse costumes, heading for a bull run in Stamford, while a makeshift bridge poses a final challenge for Bev and Graham
Phil drops off a bomb from the Second World War, and Russell makes a controversial decision while looking for somewhere to park in Southampton
The race for Transporter of the Week reaches its climax with Russell driving his big rig through the small Georgian streets of Stamford, Lincolnshire
Laurie takes 10 golf buggies to Blenheim Palace in Oxfordshire, while Jemma undertakes her first solo delivery as she transports two bars to a foodie festival in south London
Dave and Jenny set off on their first trip abroad together, moving a fragile Russian art collection from Canary Wharf, London to an international art fair in Amsterdam
Bev and Graham must deliver three vintage superhero vehicles, worth a staggering £165,000, to a 1960s film festival in Great Yarmouth on the Norfolk coast
Bev and Graham battle to load the three vintage superhero vehicles onto their trailer, while Dave and Jenny are on the road to Amsterdam
Bev and Graham are the final drivers to deliver as the contest for Transporter of the Week reaches its climax.
Up to 50,000 items are available online every day for shipping all over the UK and beyond: from the utterly bizarre, to the comically complicated, to the downright mundane. Shipping Wars follows a group of transporters across Britain as they compete to cater for the demand. Money can be made fast, but if things go wrong then fortunes can rapidly change. For the transporters going head to head, pride is paramount, so claiming the week's top transporter bragging rights is about more than just profit. In this pilot episode, a group of delivery trucks criss-cross Britain and beyond, competing to collect and drop off some of the most gob-smacking loads for Britain's eBay generation.