Parson
Member
Wondering what the interest would be in a line of American made pen kits. I'd certainly pay a couple of bucks more for something made here. How about you?
.:wink:
Just my opinion....so don't shoot me:biggrin:
Skip - just a little fyi - most people don't shoot rats they just put traps out that flip down over their scrawny little necks and squish them ... fwiw:biggrin:
:wink:
No comment on the thread at all and this has nothing to do with the comment on the thread so don't get freaked out I'm just pokin fun at a friend!!!
Mrs.
Mmmmm.....patriotism is great, but we have to be honest and realist at the same time.
Whether kits were made in USA ( America is actually a continent not a country :winkor UK or any other 'first world' country, the price would definetely be more than a 'few bucks more'. As long as people want value for money, then we don't stand a chance of seeing them made here.
I personally hope they never get made in any first world country as that would mean I'd have to give up the hobby as I couldn't afford it.:wink:
Just my opinion....so don't shoot me:biggrin:
Skip - just a little fyi - most people don't shoot rats they just put traps out that flip down over their scrawny little necks and squish them ... fwiw:biggrin:
:wink:
No comment on the thread at all and this has nothing to do with the comment on the thread so don't get freaked out I'm just pokin fun at a friend!!!
Mrs.
I hope I never ever P you off
:tongue:
I think the poll results are very interesting so far.
Perhaps people would also comment on just how much more they would be willing to pay for the exact same quality if it was made in their own country? 10% ? 50%? 200% ?
I was in staples a couple of weeks ago and either cross or parker (I'm not sure which) branded refills were clearly marked made in UK....and schmidt refills are made in Germany. So I think all is not lost.Mmmmm.....patriotism is great, but we have to be honest and realist at the same time.
Whether kits were made in USA ( America is actually a continent not a country :winkor UK or any other 'first world' country, the price would definetely be more than a 'few bucks more'. As long as people want value for money, then we don't stand a chance of seeing them made here.
I personally hope they never get made in any first world country as that would mean I'd have to give up the hobby as I couldn't afford it.:wink:
Just my opinion....so don't shoot me:biggrin:
Wondering what the interest would be in a line of American made pen kits. I'd certainly pay a couple of bucks more for something made here. How about you?
Texatdurango said:Parson, I wouldn't pay more for kits because I really don't see how "made in USA" would insure better quality just because they cost more to make!
It would be more than just a couple of bucks more, think double to triple.
The company would first have to invest millions of start-up dollars, to buy property, build a plant, hire workers that get benifits and decent wages, buy the machinery,set-up distributors, and most likley still import some raw materials. Keep dreaming that we're ever going to become a country of manufacturing plants again.
Mmmmm.....patriotism is great, but we have to be honest and realist at the same time.
Whether kits were made in USA ( America is actually a continent not a country :winkor UK or any other 'first world' country, the price would definetely be more than a 'few bucks more'. As long as people want value for money, then we don't stand a chance of seeing them made here.
I personally hope they never get made in any first world country as that would mean I'd have to give up the hobby as I couldn't afford it.:wink:
Just my opinion....so don't shoot me:biggrin:
It would be more than just a couple of bucks more, think double to triple.
The company would first have to invest millions of start-up dollars, to buy property, build a plant, hire workers that get benifits and decent wages, buy the machinery,set-up distributors, and most likley still import some raw materials. Keep dreaming that we're ever going to become a country of manufacturing plants again.
Made in the USA? You might find that the question may not mean what you think it really means.
Made in Australia? might also be a similar question. I have quite a few friends in the high end garment industry which manufactures Made in Australia clothing. The whole shirt is made in Main Land China except the buttons and button holes. According to WTO and Australian law definition only the last 5% needs to be assembled and finished in Australia for the item to be called made in Australia. They sew in the buttons and put on the button holes, give it a wash and iron, then put the "Made in Australia" sticker on it.
Vehicles are the same. I found it interesting when one of the high end car wheel manufactures in South Australia went broke and was bought out by it's biggest customer - Harley Davidson Motor cycles. The spokesman for Harley Davidson said they produced the worlds best wheels are very competitively priced and they couldn't afford not to have this business go under. This only showed to me that one of the US made bikes had Australian wheels on them.
There are several things which make it hard for a totally made US pen kit. You might find that one day someone will call it a US made pen kit but only the last 5% is done in the US (all the components sources overseas are put into the bag in the US and a made in USA sticker on it).
The factors preventing this as highlight by previous post include high wages, EPS (Erin Brockovich - hexavalent chromium in drinking water issues). But another factor which I think is missed is the disparity of scrap metal price and new billet prices.
Pen parts are manufactured from solid brass tubes. Even the brass tubes we use are not extruded from a machine that way, it is actually machined out a solid rod of brass tubes. In China and Taiwan, the waste (scrap) is sold back to the manufactures of the solid brass rods at a 20 - 30% price difference.
So if buy it in solid rod for $10/lb they will buy it back at $7/lb. This compares to us in the western world (I am not currently educated in the current price for brass) would buy the rods for about $25/lb and only get $2/lb as scrap. Pen component making is a very wasteful procedure so scrap metal prices are a important part of the equation. Ever turned a bowl and see all the wood shavings on the floor?
This is just another factor that we in the West seem to forget about.
There is a lot more too it as well but I will stop ranting now - Australia Too has become a non-manufacturing country, we are now nothing but the worlds mine pit and raw agricultural producer.
an country without regulations?????
Do you really want to see what that can and does look like?
http://www.engadget.com/2008/11/10/video-chinas-toxic-wastelands-of-consumer-electronics-revealed/
It would be more than just a couple of bucks more, think double to triple.
The company would first have to invest millions of start-up dollars, to buy property, build a plant, hire workers that get benifits and decent wages, buy the machinery,set-up distributors, and most likley still import some raw materials. Keep dreaming that we're ever going to become a country of manufacturing plants again.
I think they would be a little higher but not double or triple. My guess would be less than 25%. But that doesn't matter, because the powers that be in the USA do not want us to be a manufacturing nation. They think we can maintain a high standard of living by processing medical bills. We can't but they think we can.
We Americans are our own worst enemy. We have allowed so many roadblocks to be put in the way of industry that we price ourselves out of the market. It is not really the cheap labor that drives much of our manufacturing overseas - it is the unrealistic regulations that we've put in place. And, so far we just aren't smart enough to step back and say Whoa - enough is enough. We used to be a free country, and in some ways we still are but we are about the most regulated free country there has ever been. Someday (probably not in my lifetime) I expect the people here to wake up and demand the the government begin doing what it should have been doing all along - find ways to remove rather than construct barriers for a highly productive and hard working work force and allow them to compete on a level playing field. When that does happen we will really shine.
Even though the USA made kits are going to be more expensive. If the quality is there, I'll buy them. Since I sell completed pens. I would just offer the USA made completed pens at a premium. There are plenty of buyers willing to pay the extra for domestic made products.