forestroke
Posts: 1792
Joined: 10/20/2003 From: Taipei, TAIWAN Status: offline
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i agree with krosypal for the most part. china engines are good value. but i also agree with Mr. Akimoto simply because i do believe that o.s. engines are more reliable. for me, the added cost of that minimal increase in reliability is worth the extra price i pay for them for certain applications. yes most people will believe that O.S. is overpriced just like mercedes, bmw, lexus, infiniti and jaguars are overpriced. there is almost no additional functionality you get out of a lexus than it's toyota counterpart. so why do people buy them? because they think it is worth the money for that marginal quality benefit and some of those less tangible things. having said that, i don't agree with Mr. Akimoto's other nonchalant comments: "furiously working to produce cheap products for export" - i think this belittles the planning of the country and its companies. the fact that they produce products for the masses is a result of the consumers. i'm sure you would agree that the world is not ready to purchase high cost/high quality products from china because it just doesn't have that kind of country brand image. just like japan after the war, it could only produce cheap products for the developing countries. i don't think the japanese were thinking "let's produce the lowest quality items at the lowest costs" but rather, what can i produce at what price that others will accept? and what they found is that they could provide consumers the most value by offering low cost items at reasonable prices. and that is what essentially happened. "made in japan" was once considered a joke just as "made in taiwan" was and now "made in china" is. but clearly there was a strategy, a chosen path that was rooted not in low quality but in developing their capabilities. "early stages of re-industrialization" that is an interesting thought. while on a whole that might be true, it is misleading. while made in china the products may be, many times the design, machines, even management are foreign. i just went to a plant in shanghai and the machines they use are from japan (okuma, mazak, etc.). i've been to plants in india where all their equipment is imported (german, american, japanese, taiwanese, korean). many plants have japanese leading their quality control employing statistical quality control and reaching six sigma. the majority of laptops these days come from china including Dells, which have nearly zero-defect. so while it is true that china is still reeling from the cultural revolution, many plants if not many of areas of china are world class. so, these china engines, such as those from tower hobbies could be every bit as good as those made in developed countries. "selling them at a loss" that's a bad thing to competitors, bad thing to the manufacturer... but frankly a good thing for consumers. you're saying that we are getting even more value than we are paying for!!! but i doubt it is true. i'm not sure where you get your information from but i would say that most of these companies that produce engines are private not an SOE, so they have to make money. i think you must admit, a country such as china is not exactly treating model aircraft engines as a necessity or even desirable for economic growth. "The government planners in China (and India) are strategic (long-term) planners who see current sacrifices of long work hours and low wages for workers as a way to an eventual raising of their standard of living." huh? last i checked, there is quite a market economy in china. a lot of people around the world are moving to china to find a job. that "insatiable appetite for 3rd-world goods and services" is why Japanese is where it is today, export-led growth. and why the insatiable appetite? the products from developing countries like China and India offer products with a performance/price ratio higher than available from developed countries. of course this is slightly off-topic but it does support the entire chinese rc manufacturers, of which the company manufacturing TH is one.
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Member of the 4-stroke Symphony
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