Don't forget about wages! Pesky North Americans and their need to "live"I agree with most of this...except, it is China's fault because it isn't a real capitalist marketplace...or, more accurately, it is only a one sided capitalist marketplace. China targets and destroys competing industries because it can operate at a loss for as long as it takes. This became crystal clear with me concerning one particular car part...brake rotors. Back in the day, backyard mechanics scoured wrecking yards when they needed replacement rotors because new ones were spendy. When doing brake jobs for people, I would often price them new rotors just so I could look like a super hero when I picked up some cheap yard rotors and had them turned at a fraction of the cost. I had gotten out of this practice, as I wasn't working on other peoples' rigs as much. I was doing a brake job on my Sister-in-law's Taurus in the earliest of '00s, and while I was in NAPA, for giggles, I asked how much for a pair of rotors. The answer...$12. I was shocked...perplexed. I bought them, and noticed the 'china' sticker on the box...I couldn't stop thinking about these rotors, however. How can these two heavy chunks of steel be machined in china...stuck on a boat...floated across the ocean...trucked and/or railed to distribution centers across the US...and then shipped to individual stores and sold for a profit at a $12 price point? The answer is they couldn't...at just the price of scrap steel with no machining operations...it just wasn't possible. A few years later, and those $12 rotors are became ~$60/set at NAPA. Why...because there were no replacement rotors made in the US anymore, and china could set whatever price that maximized profit for them, but low enough to discourage any US company from getting back into the market.
The same thing happened to bicycles. US companies could have played it smarter, but the fight was always rigged.
Now IP protections is a different matter...
Overheard in an American company's product sourcing meetingDon't worry , it only has to last until the warranty runs out .
Silly Americans
Like the Chevy Corvair!Look at American cars and Bicycles before the 80s .
Look at American cars and Bicycles before the 80s .
It's a culture thing . I grew up outside Detroit in the 70s .
So I want things to go back then . When muscle cars and bikes were on everybody's wish list and foreign cars were for the exotic .
I heard some nightmare stories about imports parked at US factory's back then .
Look at American cars and Bicycles before the 80s .
It's a culture thing . I grew up outside Detroit in the 70s .
So I want things to go back then . When muscle cars and bikes were on everybody's wish list and foreign cars were for the exotic .
I heard some nightmare stories about imports parked at US factory's back then .
When I want something to be right with the old adage of "buy nice, or buy twice" while keeping it US Made (or even euro as in the case of Blue Dream), it's not done until In have enough money to do it right. Interesting side note to that is I've recent;ly been selling some vintage MTB parts to make ends meet and some of the componentry is going for ridiculous amounts of money and people who know what they want are not hesitant about buying them. Save the money, get the Phil.I'd love to justify a Phil Wood BB
When it comes to BBs though, a Shimano UN55 will last longer than cockroaches. Hard to justify 150 plus cups are extra.Save the money, get the Phil.
Hey, don't knock the Cressida, that thing could do 0-60 with n like 10.6!
And @93EXCivic YES to SportCompactCar Mag, I read every issue cover to cover bitd. Inspired me to do a B18 Civic hatchback
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