With all the great choices out there ethics can make a difference when choosing which components to buy. If given the choice, would you prefer to buy from a Made in U.S.A. company with great ethics or from a Made in China company with questionable ethics?
HEGEL - Is it really made in Norway ?
Not unlike Ayon, where it is just printed "Austria" and not "Made in Austria" (the usual and official terminology), are HEGEL products actually made and assembled in Norway or just "designed" in Norway and assembled somewhere in China?
I have tried getting a clear-cut answer from dealers with no success. Juste like for Ayon gear by the way.
Thanks if you can help.
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Obviously some people in this thread care about where a product is made, but it's not clear if that's a major concern for the majority of Americans. Your computer, cell phone, flat screen, clothing, year-round fruits & vegetables etc. are all foreign sourced. Go to a local big box and look for domestically sourced products. Regrading ethics, you are compromised whatever you buy. It's a global economy. The money and labor are fungible. Even when you buy "Made In America" component you rely upon this. |
"09-19-15: Sabai With all the great choices out there ethics can make a difference when choosing which components to buy. If given the choice, would you prefer to buy from a Made in U.S.A. company with great ethics or from a Made in China company with questionable ethics?" For the Hegel situation we're discussing on this thread, I can't really fault China. I fault Hegel. The Chinese are just doing what's being asked of them. If Hegel tells them to change the design and put Made in China in big letters on the rear face plate, I'm sure they will. |
Zd542, "shipping is not as high as you think. Everything goes into big containers and put on a boat. Its not that expensive to ship that way. Its slower but cheaper." You're right, and that's the way things SHOULD work. However, in the case of Consonance, it doesn't. Their sales volumes come in such that they could never dream of a shipping via container on the ocean. Mostly, they come over as a single or low number of items, so shipping costs are exorbitant. Air freight for an order big enough to represent an outlier would lower the cost burden, though still far more than what we mentioned as the ideal. In the end, the company actually doesn't mind at all when the higher costs get passed on down the line. In fact, their preference lies with their components selling for as much as those produced in these respective home markets. |
I didn't mean to suggest that they have to fill the whole container. There's other options available. Half size containers are available. They can be shared with other people like you that can't fill a whole one. There's shipping services available that have their own containers. They pool your shipment, along with they're other customers goods until they fill a container. I'm not even scratching the surface here. There's all kinds of ways to make this work. A friend of mine just bought a motorcycle and had it shipped from China to the US in a container. There's no way his motorcycle was the only thing inside. "In the end, the company actually doesn't mind at all when the higher costs get passed on down the line. In fact, their preference lies with their components selling for as much as those produced in these respective home markets." I'll have to take your word on that one. I've never had a businesses show me their books so I could see how all this plays out. No one likes to share that kind of info. |
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