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At the production rate of 5-per year, you’re talking Marathon Coach. They produce more than that, but that’s the production-rate ballpark you’re making a comparison to. Ever looked at how much those cost? Yeah, they’re hand made with high levels of precision, delivering very near automotive quality. As a result, they bear a commensurate cost. When you buy a Marathon, you’re paying for that higher quality fit and finish and that higher focus on QA/QC and if something is not right, they fix it...by hand.I hear this "excuse" often and I can see both sides of this. We can debate every single item of this ongoing discussion and have polar opposite sides, I can take either side. But let me just oppose this statement and let's discuss the opposite of this. Auto manufacturers yes produce exponentially more vehicles which means they have to take more time to ensure it's right before it goes to production. Now let's take a RV or boat where they make 5 PER YEAR, yes, an extreme, but let's look at the opposite of A LOT to A FEW produced to make this point. Hand made items, remember those? Wouldn't less production (or couldn't less production) yield a higher quality result due to having more time to review the production carefully? If you're not throwing 30,000 items down an assembly line but only a fraction of that, couldn't Q/A be able to actually have an impact? I would think as a result of this concept that a RV manufacturer making less has the power to make it better. The problem comes in when a company tries to over produce, they should be making X but they are instead producing 2X. You get the point. The moral is I'm not giving any company a bye because they are not as big as GM, BMW, Honda. Compare to Tesla if you want to put it in a closer comparison.
You make some good points, @Neal. Let me respond to two that caught my eye.I hear this "excuse" often and I can see both sides of this. We can debate every single item of this ongoing discussion and have polar opposite sides, I can take either side. But let me just oppose this statement and let's discuss the opposite of this. Auto manufacturers yes produce exponentially more vehicles which means they have to take more time to ensure it's right before it goes to production. Now let's take a RV or boat where they make 5 PER YEAR, yes, an extreme, but let's look at the opposite of A LOT to A FEW produced to make this point. Hand made items, remember those? Wouldn't less production (or couldn't less production) yield a higher quality result due to having more time to review the production carefully? If you're not throwing 30,000 items down an assembly line but only a fraction of that, couldn't Q/A be able to actually have an impact? I would think as a result of this concept that a RV manufacturer making less has the power to make it better. The problem comes in when a company tries to over produce, they should be making X but they are instead producing 2X. You get the point. The moral is I'm not giving any company a bye because they are not as big as GM, BMW, Honda. Compare to Tesla if you want to put it in a closer comparison.
I’d wager Newmar spent more on my visit that they typical service cost. It’s early in the NewServe service line so that total capex for getting that operation up and running is currently being spread out over a small number of service calls. Eg. $125k Truck + (hourly rate of tech x hours worked) + fuel costs + maintenance costs + benefits costs + parts costs / # service calls = omg.Factor in warranty costs. What was the cost to dispatch someone to @MapNerd? In that case Newmar may own that asset. In my case at Pellican Lake and Ft. Myers I think Newmar paid a good penny to have my washer/dryer pulled and reinstalled numerous times for Whirlpool visits. If you can improve quality that may balance warranty costs. Look at the cost of the Flexsteel situation (assumed).
All campfire talk, again, we can each switch seats and take a different view. I share your views too. Pass the smores please.
Yea man. Give me switches and buttons any day. I am beginning to hate computer controlled coaches etc. I can replace a switch. A tablet to turn on lights, open slides, flush toilet - to me - ridiculous and a waste of time and money. And, I am not even old.We are still going to need specialized driver/passenger seats. No "residential furniture" is going to work there. Does this mean that those seats won't match the upholstery/color in the rest of the coach? Not a major deal for us, but it probably would be for some.
Why? As has been stated, "technology" comes at a price; both dollar-wise and maintenance wise. I'm all for technology when it serves a necessary purpose. For us, glass dashes, computerized light switches and similar high-end technology are unnecessary and simply introduce additional failure points into the system.
That's our story and we're sticking with it.
TJ