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  #1  
Old 03-22-2007, 08:15 PM
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Fluid Power Fluid Power is offline
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Angry A great article on the reason to buy American.

As a business owner dependent on manufacturing and living in a state with several Japanese owned plants, this article summerizes the affects it has on the economy.

http://www.thecarconnection.com/pf/A...92.A11981.html

Climbing off the soap box.....

Darren

Last edited by Fluid Power; 03-23-2007 at 12:21 PM.
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Old 03-22-2007, 11:24 PM
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Capitalism is ruthless and necessary, the strong and capable must win so that we can be provided with the best, cheapest goods and the successful are rewarded. To move away from this philosophy is to embrace socialism and a certain non reversable decline into mediocrity and eventual economic failure.

Human nature is such that if people are taken care off, they will not work and live off welfare. Once excessive benefits are given the "common worker". they cannot be taken away. Look at the Uaw. The big 3 pay 1500 to 2000 dollars per car for retirement/medical/and bull**** worker production rules.

Gm is the largest health care provider in the US.

The only solution is for the Big3 is to continue to lose money for the next few years until all of their assets are bled off and than they will reorganize and offload their health care etc to the feds, and begin production again and attempt to be competitive.

If the best car for you is US, go for it, if not buy what appeals to you the most. Support the best product at the cheapest price, in the long run we will all benefit.
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Old 03-23-2007, 05:57 AM
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California,

Nicely put. I agree with what your are saying but I feel that the comments are a little general. From an economic stand point, Japanese, Korea and China are not playing fair in our market. By manipulating their currency, it allows them an unfair advantage in our market place.

I do agree with your comments on GM legecy costs. (the negotiators of the old union contracts just pushed the buck to the later generations.)

The point the article made to me is the US market is only so big, and by buying goods made by foreign companies, in the US, is not really helping the US. Be it cars or toys etc. Auto's are what makes the front page.

Owning an industrial engineering firm that design builds and installs machines for industry, I am faced with this on a weekly basis. I live in Ohio, there is a Honda car plant, motorcycle plant, the Anna engine plant (the largest engine manufacturing plant in the world) and about 150-250 suppliers for these Honda facilities. Having been in business long before the Honda plants were even here, Guess how many engineering jobs I have gotten from any of the plants? If you guessed ZERO you would be correct. It is a small world I live in business wise, and my competitors have had as much success as I have at doing work with them.

You know who gets the work? There is an industrial park that houses some Japanese industrial engineers....They do all of it. To top it off, they buy Japanese parts (pnuematic cylinders, valves, controls etc) to put on the machines. Where do they get parts? From a Japanese parts house, that imports it from Japan. I was in plant this week looking at a safety guard for a new press. This plant does metal stamping for Honda. Where were the presses from? Japan. In fact every peice of equipment in the plant has been brought over from Japan. Care to guess where the dies are made that they use to form the parts? Sony computers, Panasonic TV's in the break room, I could go on...

Me? 99% of the products we represent and use on a daily basis are made in Chicago, Bimba air cylinders, Barrington Automation, Wilkerson FRLs, Parker, etc. All made here.

The article just hits close to home for me. I am not complaining about business, it is very good and I have been fortunate. But, this week, we had 2 plants close that we have done business with every year for the last 15 years..Keystone Powedered Metal (auto related components) and Lancaster Glass......

Darren

Last edited by Fluid Power; 03-23-2007 at 12:29 PM.
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Old 03-23-2007, 06:34 AM
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That's an excellent read.
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Old 03-23-2007, 09:40 AM
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Still does not get to the elephant in the room. GM and other domestics in the business built crappy cars for years. The worker on the assembly line did not tell CEO's like Roger Smith etc. to go and buy all kinds of unrelated companies in the 80's and 90's and then lose their shirts. Or should I say the line assembly guys shirts?


I'm looking out the window right now and saw a early Chevy Lumina with huge sheets of "water based" paint peeling off it. What a great introduction to General Motors products eh?

GM,Ford,DCX can build all the AMG's,Z06's,Shelby's they want. But what keeps the lights on are the bread and butter sedans. Which the domestics ceded to the foreign brands decades ago. And it will take decades again to regain what they have lost. Not that any of them give a damn. They are all just looking to the next huge 'Bonus" payment. rant off
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Old 03-26-2007, 06:39 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by hectore3
Still does not get to the elephant in the room. GM and other domestics in the business built crappy cars for years. The worker on the assembly line did not tell CEO's like Roger Smith etc. to go and buy all kinds of unrelated companies in the 80's and 90's and then lose their shirts. Or should I say the line assembly guys shirts?
Ah, but let's look at a few things our own government has done to help kill the big elephant! Way back around the time of the first couple of gas crunches, our government instituted a bunch of crash standards, as well as emissions standards. Then, because many of the imports got such great mileage, our government exempted those imports from the standards!

Quote:
Originally Posted by hectore3
I'm looking out the window right now and saw a early Chevy Lumina with huge sheets of "water based" paint peeling off it. What a great introduction to General Motors products eh?
Again, why did GM, Ford, and Chrysler have trouble with the water based paints? Because they were forced to use them to meet emission standars. The way a new car has its emissions tested for federal standards is by measuring ALL of the emissions the car give off, including those made from the curing of glues, plastics, and paint. A car shipped from overseas won't have as hard a time meeting those standards because it cures on the boat.

Add to all of this that, even now when the imports build cars in the US, they manage to skirt paying any taxes, have no Unions, Etc, and you can see why they still have some unfair advantages. On top of this, you have a fickle population that views anything the domestics build as inferior despite any evidence to the contrary.

Funny too that enviromentalists love the imports, especially Japanese imports, this despite the fact that Japan kills more elephants, whales, dolphins, and sharks than any other country in the world.

Shiny Side Up!
Bill

Last edited by ProTouring442; 03-30-2007 at 12:30 PM.
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Old 03-26-2007, 08:52 AM
californiacuda californiacuda is offline
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If the Japanese manufacturer in Ohio only uses Japanese related companies than they are probably shooting themselves in the foot, By being racist they are probably missing opportunities to obtain widgets at a better price or quality.

In the long run its a good sign, it means that they think they are too good, and they don't have to be competitive. Maybe if their business practice like this continues they may loose a competitive edge.

Maybe if enough people know about racist priactices like this, Honda could loose some good will and maybe a few buyers.
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Old 03-26-2007, 11:19 AM
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Thanks Bill! You nailed it. The whole basis for moving production to the United States is to prevent the tariffs and taxes being imposed by our government.

The reason that Honda and other Japanese manufacturers use only Japanese parts is to help out their own economy and the companies they work with.

There are several plants that build parts for the big three, (brake/fuel lines come to mind) and the same companies are also suppliers to Japanese plants. There is pricing differences based on the American vs. Japanese, meaning that Gm/Ford etc, pay more for parts than the Japanese companies.

Oh well.....Quoting a bumper sticker, "Buy American, the job you save might be your own."

Darrem
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Old 03-29-2007, 06:06 PM
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One of the main reasons that world class manufacturers, including the Japanese, use plant equipment from one source is because they practice a methodology called Copy Exactly Tracking. This means that, regardless of where in the world a manufacturing center containing equipment is located, That equipment is configured, process documented, operated and maintained in EXACTLY the same way. Having two (or more) methodologies for the same process, spread across multiple manufacturing locations would never produce the exact same quality result, and automatically and dramatically adds cost; one methodology would always be better than the other one(s), in some way. World class manufacturers know that this is the only way they can achieve high consistency / quality across multiple manufacturing operations.

If it's any consolation, when you go to a McDonalds in Yokohama, Taipei, or Kuala Lumpur, the french fry and shake machines are the same exact (US Built) ones used in Ohio....get it? -Rob
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Last edited by rwhite692; 03-29-2007 at 06:17 PM.
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Old 03-30-2007, 11:23 AM
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Oh Rob, if it was only as simple as your shake machine example. Like I said in my earlier post, I have been doing this longer than the Honda plant has been around. While you are correct about duplicating processes and machines for maintenance and quality, how does that example stand up when the product is not exported? In this case, the manufacturing of the Accord, it stays in the United States. Like wise the other products manufactured by Honda in Ohio. The Ridgeline Pickup, as are some motorcylces and 4-wheelers. Comparing the car business to the Milkshake machine business is hardly on the same scale. I have done work for the Kappus Company (that builds the Milkshake machines) while an impressive place, it employees a fraction of 1% of people associated with the automotive business....

Darren
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