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Since it is a bit quiet around here I thought I would post a few observations I have gleaned in recent times about what guys like Bob go through . . . Now I know this I personally prefer to deal with guys like Bob. If we don't support them then we will be left with the big boys and their high prices.Anyway off soapbox now. And I really would like to hear what others think.
In the last ten years (I believe), B&W was still using electrolytic caps in their crossovers for some of their mid-level products. Cutting corners can often be the case on anything but the highest-end designs from a major name company. For the highest of the high-end...that's not generally where smaller companies focus. You need a credible history for people to take a flier on your offering when you're selling something that expensive. Danny Richie just did the design work for a $180,000 offering FWIW...though you don't see that too often. The whole idea that big companies have better engineering is a myth.
I see pretty high resale value going on for products from the smaller companies. So the generalizations about resale value seem basically untrue to me. I think it's more about the product itself than "large" vs "small."
I admire Bob's passion but that's not enough to get me to buy his products.
And unfortunately, one or two guys working in a garage just don't have the money for R&D like one of the big companies do.
I think when you plunk down $15k for a set of Wilson Sophia's your odds of getting 7-10k when you sell them used is pretty good and should anything ever go wrong with them, you'll be able to get them fixed immediately.
Whether that's worth the extra money to anyone is their call, but I've seen too many of these guys go under and now you have a product with ZERO resale value.
...Think about it. A small manufacturer typically cannot out-source in the quantities needed to get the good prices from off shore vendors due to the large financial commitment needed for a minimum purchase. On the other hand, if they build their enclosures in-house, no matter how much attention and detail they bring to the table they're not going to improve upon the fit & finish provided by names like Wilson, etc. Sure, custom finishes are easier to come by, but the market for that isn't big enough to support more than 2 or 3 companies offering ONLY (or mostly) that. So, WHAT do they have to offer that gives them even half a chance at competing? R&D… that's what. In fact, that's about all they have. "Build a better mouse trap… yada-yada." Yeah, right… but it’s the only game we are able to play.Take care,-Bob...
While this may be an unpopular view, the reason I'm just not crazy about the small guys is the reason Gary mentioned, they are all undercapitalized. And unfortunately, one or two guys working in a garage just don't have the money for R&D like one of the big companies do. Yes, you pay more money for a set of Wilson's, Focal's or (insert your favorite large speaker company here) but you get more quality control, an engineering department, customer service and support and resale value when you decide to make a change. I think when you plunk down $15k for a set of Wilson Sophia's your odds of getting 7-10k when you sell them used is pretty good and should anything ever go wrong with them, you'll be able to get them fixed immediately.Whether that's worth the extra money to anyone is their call, but I've seen too many of these guys go under and now you have a product with ZERO resale value. Again, if you aren't talking big bucks, taking a chance on a small speaker mfr isn't a bad way to get a little extra bang for the buck, but I've yet to see any of the smaller mfrs. make a product at the quality level of someone like Wilson, Focal, Avalon, etc etc.There really aren't any corners to be cut. While the small guy doesn't have the overhead that the big guys do, they don't purchase in bulk, so the money you think you are saving buying from one of these guys just goes out the other window, because they have to pay 5-10 times as much for the same teflon capacitor that B&W uses. So it's really kind of a wash in the end.
Gee, I lean toward the small guys because I know their heart and soul is in the product and I'm not funding some large machine which needs high margins to stay afloat. I'd rather get a boutique amp or speaker from someone who really cares and personally handles my product during the build than from a high volume automated manufacturer who doesn't have my best interests in mind. I anticipate more shortcuts from the big guys than the small guys. Quality? Can't tell me Wilson's have more quality than Salks, especially in the sound area.I have a little experience in R&D, having run a 100 person $26M organization. I see more gimmicks than sound engineering from some of these large companies due to the marketing pressure they are under to keep their margins up.