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Bingo, on both counts.There is no strategic advantage for the manufacturer to sit on release date information. The common-sense play is to post any concrete release date information available in order to maximize demand. As it is, it's unlikely that the "firm" dates will ever be more precise that the release quarter, given that product may be delayed by factors beyond the contractor such as the freight carrier, customs, destination port and weather. The last ESM well car release sat in New York City on the container ship an extra two weeks or so because the port hadn't gotten around to unloading the LCL product on the ship. And that was with the shipment departing China on time and going through pre-customs to avoid delays there.
If you set aside $$ in your September budget for those F's, depending on your approach, you may well not have the fundage in May to make the purchase because the May money is "dedicated" to something else. That leaves the dealer in a lurch WRT his/her stock, and puts you and the dealer at odds even though neither of you is really at fault.
No one said we don't know what's coming. When it's coming is the issue. You find out what when you get the shipment manifest prior to container loading. Once you know it's in the container (or at least in possession of the broker) and what ship the container is being transported on, you have a general idea of when it will arrive based on the ship's schedule.These also are not big-ticket high-volume items, so they don't take priority regarding shipping schedules.
Two dates that would be good share then, 1)when the factory starts production and 2)when it is expected to leave the dock in China. Interestingly enough the Atlas website has update about 2/3 of the products that were listed 1st quarter.
Why, so blame can be assessed to whomever has possession of the goods if/when the chain breaks down? What productive purpose would that serve? All that would do is tick people off.Picking of nits to pick, regarding budgeted funds — if hobby funds for a certain month are earmarked for an incoming product, and the product gets delayed, why wouldn't that money remain set aside until said product arrives? I've never understood the concept of not having available funds for late-arriving product if technically it was allocated in the original release month. If product is delayed, I just put the money aside and it's there whenever the product arrives.
Yes, actually sharing hard data, like items are actually in production or physically on a ship would be worse than posting stale data, incorrect data, or wild a$$ guesses. it isn't about blame, it is about information so people make make better informed decisions.
I also do not understand CBQ Fan's need to know where the delay is occurring. Delay is delay. Whether it is because there is a strike at the factory or someone didn't pay a bribe to have the container loaded on a ship is really irrelevant to me.
Where the delays occur are irrelevant. Once the container is loaded, you're going to see the product within a month of the posted date.
Which is only helpful if they post the information timely.
I'll take this one step further - what is the beef here? In the old days (yes, the old days) we were happy whenever new stuff showed up.
But then again I think Kato has a an unfair advantage because (AFAIK) they manufacture their models in-house.