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In defense of VPI and big mouth Harry, it's not the price of the motor (except maybe the DD motor) you're paying for. 40% of the retail cost goes to the dealer, but it's the cost of labor, design, machining, R&D that's expensive. Machining acrylic and steel, not to mention making a tonearm and main bearing, is expensive. neo
I agree here, the fact that the manufacturer is the one that makes and assumes all the risks in the business, the retailers are the ones making a killing. With roughly 100% over wholesale, the retailers is making basically double what the manufacturer makes! AND there is no risks as a retailer can take your (consumer's) money, then order it from the manufacturer!Just because HW tells you how much things costs, etc...and they are transparent about it, doesn't mean that they use cheap parts and sell it to you at astronomical prices..hey, if they could make it work and sell, they'd be out of business!
After hearing a demo of the arm at VPI against the JW memorial arm using same cart the difference was not subtle. Wether that difference is worth the money is up to the potential buyer.charles
Limited production quantities is what drives the price of the high end (even higher). Do you think that manufacturing supply companies want to build 10 or 25 or even 50 units? That barely covers the set-up costs for most companies. You, as the consumer, pay huge price penalties on low volume, high priced gear.The usual table formula works here: The lower the production run, the higher the unit cost. While VPI may have some unique stuff, like the 3D tonearm, I wonder if the unit is much better then my $500 Technics SL1200MKII (2007 model). Technics built over 2,000,000,000 of these babies. The tooling costs spread over 2,000,000 units is almost a non-factor. How many DD tables has VPI sold? I doubt if the number is going to be over a 2,000 a year (just a guess, but I think it's a good guess).Most consumers think they are spending their money on some super high technology, but the reality is, they are spending it on low production runs and that does not equate to quality.
Limited production quantities is what drives the price of the high end (even higher). Do you think that manufacturing supply companies want to build 10 or 25 or even 50 units? That barely covers the set-up costs for most companies. You, as the consumer, pay huge price penalties on low volume, high priced gear.The usual table formula works here: The lower the production run, the higher the unit cost. While VPI may have some unique stuff, like the 3D tonearm, I wonder if the unit is much better then my $500 Technics SL1200MKII (2007 model). Technics built over 2,000,000,000 of these babies.
I'm sure neither one of you have been in a manufacturing environment......
OK, what's your manufacturing background?