โOct-27-2018 11:11 AM
โOct-29-2018 07:57 AM
2oldman wrote:joshuajim wrote:The problem is American consumers who want the cheapest possible products.
The problem is AMERICAN companies that want the cheapest produced products that result in the greatest profit.
โOct-29-2018 07:36 AM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:Just a question: Why are you in Mexico? Companies move their plants to someplace because it's cheaper, but if you do it, that's different. Maybe the companies just need someone to set an example for them, so if you move back then maybe they'll follow suit.
Yes and I can buy electro-switch brand for 75 dollars a copy and Premier Supertanium bolts for three dollars each. Overkill quality for sure. Shoot they even sell gold plated contact made-in-USA WATTGATE receptacles for 175 dollars each.
Another good area to start would be clothes and shoes where a Chinese size 13 reverts back to a USA size 11-1/2.
Pants have pockets too small, shirts are proportioned for a circus freak. We grow millions of tons of cotton -- where does it go?
99% of Chinese goods have garbage can quality.
This is all due to companies wanting to maximize profit. Are you -really- foolish enough to believe it's being done for -your- benefit?
โOct-29-2018 07:33 AM
โOct-29-2018 07:17 AM
โOct-29-2018 05:14 AM
โOct-29-2018 04:17 AM
โOct-29-2018 03:57 AM
โOct-29-2018 03:32 AM
docsouce wrote:
Here's the thing for me. I look at my RV parked in the driveway and it might as well have a label on it, "made in china/mexico/canada but assembled in the USA". I would like to know just how many parts/components are actually made completely in the USA. Now,this I hope is a wrong assumption: even if the parts were made in the USA would they be any better? The generations that made quality parts from our own resources (steel,machine tools,experience) has retired or passed away.
That void has never been filled because the need disappeared. I see we are trying to get this manufacturing base restarted, but who is going to do the hands on dirty work? If you could get the phone out of these young people's hand and gave them a micrometer and asked them to measure a piece of steel, all you would get is a blank stare..
I don't have any answers for these questions, but it has been bothering me for a while.. Meanwhile I'll keep using my hand me down 70 year old craftsman,snap on,husky, South Bend lathe and Bridgeport milling machine.
โOct-28-2018 03:29 PM
โOct-27-2018 09:38 PM
โOct-27-2018 07:33 PM
agesilaus wrote:
1. American companies are trying to compete with Chinese companies who basically have slave labor. (I've been to China and speak from personal experience)
2. There are no unions in China.
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Another reason President Trump is holding a gun to their head....along with plenty of others. I'm surprised the moderator hasn't pulled the plug on this.
โOct-27-2018 07:33 PM
โOct-27-2018 07:28 PM
larry cad wrote:
1. American companies are trying to compete with Chinese companies who basically have slave labor. (I've been to China and speak from personal experience)
2. There are no unions in China.
3. American companies are having difficulty finding good workers. Actually, they are having trouble finding BAD workers. My job takes me into numerous factories and all of them cannot find enough good workers. Recently one customer wanted to restart a mothballed facility because the economy is going good. They interviewed 600 applicants to fill 150 positions and failed because of mandatory drug testing.
โOct-27-2018 07:06 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
Why am I fuming? I lost a forty dollar frying pan this morning. An elite brand. The handle came off the hard way with absolutely no way to repair it. Elite USA brand name -- manufactured in China. We canno make a @#$%^&! forty dollar frying pan. Gimmee a break.
โOct-27-2018 06:10 PM