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Still not getting how people don't understand that the dollar has been getting weaker against the Yuan ... and that this is driving the cost of anything made in China .... yep, you guessed it - up!The cost of a Yuan has gone up 24% since 2006.
Even at that the manufacturers should or better realize there is a limit on what modelers are willing to pay.
Being in the minority does not make me wrong. There are always going to be more people lacking intelligence than those who have it, so I am fine being in the minority. The auto analogy is not flawed and if you don't understand it I am not going to take the time to educate you on it. I have to wonder what exactly makes you the expert and final ruling on any issue anyway? You have no clue exactly what my knowledge is on marketing and production. Also my comments have been directed to one company and one product line within that company. I don't know why my thoughts and opinions get you so upset and fired up but you are really becoming amusing. You can't argue with the fact that Kato brings to market new products with new tooling at a price that is more competitive than Atlas. By your line of reasoning companies never go out of business, never have to hire people from the outside to improve/save them, and never make the wrong decision or make a mistake. You might want to have your water checked.
Even at that the manufacturers should or better realize there is a limit on what modelers are willing to pay.Now,exactly how many cars and locomotive shells can they get out of a ton of material? Only the manufacturers knows and they will never tell-unless you are buying the company.
Not all the problems are monetary. I agree, the dollar is not helping things but, if you can't get a product produced, you can't sell it and make money. If Atlas can't run the through the large volume, they can't get the "volume discount".
What part of this don't you understand? Should the manufactures keep their retail prices flat, even though their costs are skyrocketing? It takes a certain amount of profit to stay in business. I'm very confident that they realize that increasing prices are going to lead to lower sales numbers and some of that price increase is built in to help cover that. If you can't sell as many units, make more profit on the ones you do sell to cover the difference and stay solvent. All that matters is the bottom line and there are still many, many people out there that will buy the loco they want, no mater what the cost. Right now, the manufactures are relying on those customers to keep them going till things settle in. No one is forcing you to buy any loco. If it is out of your price range, then don't buy it. If it is something you really want, then buy one, not 4-5 of them. How many diesel consist have 4 of the exact same loco in them anyhow? There is a lot of brass I would like to have but I can't afford it so I pass. Life goes on, I survive and pay my bills. There are still plenty of less expensive options out there for someone starting out. The hobby is not hurting. The MR sales in our shop have been growing for the past 5 years. This all makes my decision to model steam so much more pleasant...one, maybe two new loco releases a year are much easier to budget for, I don't need to worry about double heading, and Atlas transition era cars keep coming and are not jumping in price as fast as diesel locos.
Mighty big talk from someone who's never worked in the model railroading manufacturing industry and has repeatedly shown you know nothing about how it works. You make one valid observation regarding expertise however - there is no point in continuing this debate with you, as we have no common point of relevance from which to start since you have zero model railroad manufacturing experience. After you get a few decades of experience under your belt, we can debate further which model railroading marketing models work and which don't.
Tony,What part don't you understand about the question?A ton of material will produce a lot of shells and car bodies driving down some of the per unit cost...
This just proves how uneducated you are about my resume. You know nothing about me and you are completely wrong. Your ignorance in the matter is not worth waiting a few decades to tell you that you are still wrong. You know what they say about "assume" don't you. Please don't assume anything about me and please leave me out of your equation. When your main line of production ownes your major compitition you are are going to be left holding the short stick at some point. But since you know everything this should not be news to you.