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Quote from: asciibaron on July 03, 2008, 01:34:50 PMQuote from: CVSNE on July 03, 2008, 10:06:43 AMHuh????what do you mean "huh?" have you ever dealt with a factory in China - i have and it's a PITA. the owner is not the owner and the labor is not hired by the factory. it's like migrant farming, but in a factory. Steve, the person going by CVSNE is none other than Marty McGuirk, formerly of InterMountain and Model Railroader, so I would think he certainly is familiar with dealing with Chinese factories. We have several IMRC "alumni" on The RailWire.
Quote from: CVSNE on July 03, 2008, 10:06:43 AMHuh????what do you mean "huh?" have you ever dealt with a factory in China - i have and it's a PITA. the owner is not the owner and the labor is not hired by the factory. it's like migrant farming, but in a factory.
Huh????
Steve, the person going by CVSNE is none other than Marty McGuirk, formerly of InterMountain and Model Railroader, so I would think he certainly is familiar with dealing with Chinese factories. We have several IMRC "alumni" on The RailWire.
How long will it be before they show us how to add DCC to a tree?
Quote from: 3rdrail on July 03, 2008, 03:56:57 PMSteve, the person going by CVSNE is none other than Marty McGuirk, formerly of InterMountain and Model Railroader, so I would think he certainly is familiar with dealing with Chinese factories. We have several IMRC "alumni" on The RailWire.does that mean i have no idea what i'm talking about?-Steve
No, but you implied he did not know what he was talking about. I would think that as a Vice President of InterMountain he had more than a passing acquaintance with Chinese assembly practices. BTW, according to the article that appeared in MR, Kader owns its factories, which produce far more than Bachmann, Graham Farish, Liliput, etc., so the Bachmann model may not fit the other importers.
"It employs up to 18000 workers and annually produces over 1.3 million train sets for the U.S market alone!"Golly, if all other mfgs, like MT, Athearn, and the LHS who put together train sets for Xmas match that number, we might have 3-4Mil kids (or Dads) buying their first train set each year.....Seems to me like if we keep 1% of those in model railroading, the future is bright. Hard to imagine 30,000 new modelers a year when MR subscriptions total 167,000. Even 3,000 new modelers would be pretty good (0.1%)BTW, got to ask a few questions, even if you probably can't know the answer....If MT couplers cost us about $2.50 per car/loco, adding those to a Bachman car for $0.76 isn't that bad a deal, is it? IM and RC put them on their cars. When Atlas offered both types couplers, the price difference was about that of the retail of MT. Why would he have to add more than say 115% of his actual coupler cost to offer MT couplers?The tooling costs sound about right, but I have heard some who supposedly know say that now that tooling is done overseas to similar quality of US tooling, that the prices have dropped, by a third to half or more. To be competitive, it sounds like they have to re-engineer their business model a bit. Just MHO, as I am looking at this from afar.Thanks for the interesting info.
I belive there are two business models running in China currently. The first is the old state owned contrected factories that many toy makers use, and the other model is a more western approach where certain companies own their own facilities and have their own factory workers on payroll.
When I worked for Intermountain I was most familiar with two Chinese manufacturing outfits - one called H K Sanda Kan, which was originally a Taiwanese company (the founder is a Chinese national who became a US citizen and settled in Baltimore, where he became good friends with the individual who owned Life-Like). The second company was started by a former CEO of Sanda Kan and is called "AFFA Technologies."
Manassas? Marty! You're within striking distance of the Inner Circle... You're on the list for the next ops session on the Shore.Welcome to the Mid Atlantic!Lee