rsh
Member
Just a thought. Should Leica begin building its lenses in Japan in order to reduce prices? For those insistent on German made lenses, how about a la carte lenses.
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Actually it's Toyota that has been consistently coming out as the winner in car quality statistics in Germany over the last decade or so.georgl said:1980s quality of a Mercedes is not existing anymore in the car-industry, not with todays Mercs (still great cars) and especially not with the companies which started the fight about lower production-costs every year (Toyota, Honda....)...
Actually the problem with Rollei was that the production facility in Singapore was way too overdimensioned and that cameras weren't up to the technological standard set by other camera companies, not that you can't produce quality cameras in cheap labour countries in SE Asia. Nikon has been producing cameras in Malaysia for ages and it hasn't killed the company.trying to reduce production costs just by producing in low-wages-countries nearly destroyed the company (like Rollei with production in Singapore)
Actually it's all about efficiency. It was about efficiency in the 1970s when people shifted things to cheap labour countries, it's about efficiency now. What has changed is mainly the way efficiency is being measured. Back then it was labour costs only, now it is an aggregate of labour costs and other long-term factors that were ignored back then.It's not about the wages, it's about long-term effects, how reliable are the workers, can you rely on them in bad times? Are they interested in the company, its products? Or are they just scared to loose their job and starving? How effective is the production, how good is the infrastructure?
On a side name: interesting that this name falls through the spam filter because it has "shіt" in it. 🙂Matsu****a
Sonnar2 said:I have a brand new Zeiss C-Sonnar here, Made in Japan. It's everything except cheapely made. Zeiss outsorced production (not quality control) to Cosina because they don't run still film lenses anymore in Germany. Cosina has capacities slots available.
Leica is different: Lens runs are smaller (hundreds instead of thousands). Premium prices with premium quality. That's for lenses. Camera production doesn't really earn money in Germany, but they need them to sell their lenses. And with the M8 they again have a premium product which is unique at the market. If the M8 fails on the market no other will follow "Made in Germany"...
cheers Frank
PS, my car is a Toyota Landcruiser. They usually work for 30 years and more... not many German brands left on the market with this reputation level.
Sonnar2 said:PS, my car is a Toyota Landcruiser. They usually work for 30 years and more... not many German brands left on the market with this reputation level.
Actually they could have. There was a huge body of skilled optics engineers in East Germany. That's why Zeiss Oberkochen invested heavily in VEB Carl Zeiss Jena after reunification, and while there were large numbers of layoffs (due to an internal crisis at Zeiss and the strains of German unification in general) Jena is now the seat of a flourishing optical industry and, besides Dresden, one of the few regions where the industrial tradition of East Germany could be kept up.jaapv said:There they have a motivated, well trained and dedicated workforce of specialists and a 150 years tradition of precision optical production. Wetzlar and Solms are the only place they can be, they could not even move to another region in Germany.
The Czech Republic actually has a good tradition of quality optical engineering. Meopta comes to mind, from customer products such as enlargers and cameras to military gear.jaapv said:After all, the borders of Poland and the Czech Republic are within a few hundred kilometers of them and there the labour costs are les than 30% of those in Japan.
Could have been the usage pattern, though. A friend's Toyota began to fall apart at well over 300,000 km, and, as I mentioned, they regularly come out first in German car reliability surveys.newyorkone said:My family always bought Toyotas and we've gone through many of them and all of them had pretty much the same death timer.
rxmd said:Actually they could have. There was a huge body of skilled optics engineers in East Germany. That's why Zeiss Oberkochen invested heavily in VEB Carl Zeiss Jena after reunification, and while there were large numbers of layoffs (due to an internal crisis at Zeiss and the strains of German unification in general) Jena is now the seat of a flourishing optical industry and, besides Dresden, one of the few regions where the industrial tradition of East Germany could be kept up.
Philipp
jaapv said:Maybe Canon should start producing their 1D series in Europe to cut prices..😉