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#1
posted to alt.sailing,alt.sailing.asa,uk.rec.sailing
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Sorry, if it's was a bit over-populistic. What I had in mind was just that
25% of the boats in the Challenge, Volvo Ocean race and so on are facing equipment problem. - and we don't judge these bad quality. Just "high tech". No doubt that Bavaria 42 Match has a problem. - and thereby Bavaria as such Sorry for the customers that spend money on these. I guess it will be hard to get a good price on a used 42 Match without extensive, and expensive, improvements to the hull. I'm not especially fund of Bavaria. I just think I should counterbalance the little group of sailors that seems to think that onle ineffective, non-computerised oldfashioned work is "good quality". Remember the definition of "good qulity": That is when you get exactly what you expect. Good or bad. Bjarke "Christine Sheffield" wrote in message ... "BrianH" wrote in message ... Bart Senior wrote: You have to be joking Bjarke! Even in racing boats, keel bolts have backing plates. This is an obvious error in construction and reveal serious quality control and perhaps also a design problem. I agree, it was such a silly comment I thought it better not to respond. "It happens every day on performance boats" !!! snip |
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#2
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Remember the definition of "good qulity": That is when you get exactly
what you expect. Good or bad. That's an unusual definition, are you saying that the quality of a product is defined by the expectations of the purchaser? Would that make a supermarket own brand cheap white loaf, quality bread ? Have you ever read "Zen and the art of motor cycle maintenance" ? |
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#3
posted to alt.sailing,alt.sailing.asa,uk.rec.sailing
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Thats the essense of quality according to the ISO9000 standard
(corresponding British Standards Institute BS 5750). If you promise the customer a piece of crap, fast and for low price, then it's bad quality to deliver late and for a higher price, even if the product in it self has better data. No, that I have not read the book about Zen. Is it relevant ? /Bjarke "Nigel" wrote in message ... Remember the definition of "good qulity": That is when you get exactly what you expect. Good or bad. That's an unusual definition, are you saying that the quality of a product is defined by the expectations of the purchaser? Would that make a supermarket own brand cheap white loaf, quality bread ? Have you ever read "Zen and the art of motor cycle maintenance" ? |
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#4
posted to alt.sailing,alt.sailing.asa,uk.rec.sailing
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Thats the essense of quality according to the ISO9000 standard
(corresponding British Standards Institute BS 5750). I beg to differ, the essence of quality through 9001:2000 is "Continual improvement", through setting objectives, improving your processes, and being driven by customer satisfaction and customer focus. |
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#5
posted to alt.sailing,alt.sailing.asa,uk.rec.sailing
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But it's the same thing.
Bavaria continue to improve (think of the early boats), their objective is to deliver "more boat for the money", they continue to improve the production process to make it cheaper, faster and more reliant. Customers are satisfied because they want space and can have a 42 footer for the cost of a 36 foot Rassy and they can have it equiped as they want. Fit's nicely into the ISO9000 definition of quality /Bjarke "MJ" wrote in message ... Thats the essense of quality according to the ISO9000 standard (corresponding British Standards Institute BS 5750). I beg to differ, the essence of quality through 9001:2000 is "Continual improvement", through setting objectives, improving your processes, and being driven by customer satisfaction and customer focus. |
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#6
posted to alt.sailing,alt.sailing.asa,uk.rec.sailing
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OK, so if Bavaria customers are satisfied why do they seem to have such a
poor reputation ?. "Bjarke Christensen" (nej, det skal selvfølgelig være med K da jeg er dansker) wrote in message . dk... But it's the same thing. Bavaria continue to improve (think of the early boats), their objective is to deliver "more boat for the money", they continue to improve the production process to make it cheaper, faster and more reliant. Customers are satisfied because they want space and can have a 42 footer for the cost of a 36 foot Rassy and they can have it equiped as they want. Fit's nicely into the ISO9000 definition of quality /Bjarke "MJ" wrote in message ... Thats the essense of quality according to the ISO9000 standard (corresponding British Standards Institute BS 5750). I beg to differ, the essence of quality through 9001:2000 is "Continual improvement", through setting objectives, improving your processes, and being driven by customer satisfaction and customer focus. |
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#7
posted to alt.sailing,alt.sailing.asa,uk.rec.sailing
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"MJ" wrote in message
... OK, so if Bavaria customers are satisfied why do they seem to have such a poor reputation ?. "Bjarke Christensen" (nej, det skal selvfølgelig være med K da jeg er dansker) wrote in message . dk... But it's the same thing. Bavaria continue to improve (think of the early boats), their objective is to deliver "more boat for the money", they continue to improve the production process to make it cheaper, faster and more reliant. Customers are satisfied because they want space and can have a 42 footer for the cost of a 36 foot Rassy and they can have it equiped as they want. Fit's nicely into the ISO9000 definition of quality /Bjarke "MJ" wrote in message ... Thats the essense of quality according to the ISO9000 standard (corresponding British Standards Institute BS 5750). I beg to differ, the essence of quality through 9001:2000 is "Continual improvement", through setting objectives, improving your processes, and being driven by customer satisfaction and customer focus. Actually, the ISO9000 standard is more about documenting what you do rather than the actual quality of the result. Here's a good, simple link... http://praxiom.com/iso-9001.htm -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
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#8
posted to alt.sailing,alt.sailing.asa,uk.rec.sailing
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Isn't Bavaria bad reputation primarily among non-Bavaria-owners? Do you know
of a Bavaria owner that is not satisfied ? (apart from 42 MATCH owners) /Bjarke non-Bavaria-sailor "MJ" wrote in message ... OK, so if Bavaria customers are satisfied why do they seem to have such a poor reputation ?. snip |
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#9
posted to alt.sailing,alt.sailing.asa,uk.rec.sailing
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"Bjarke Christensen" (nej, det skal selvfølgelig være med K da jeg er dansker) skrev i en meddelelse . dk... Sorry, if it's was a bit over-populistic. What I had in mind was just that 25% of the boats in the Challenge, Volvo Ocean race and so on are facing equipment problem. - and we don't judge these bad quality. Just "high tech". No doubt that Bavaria 42 Match has a problem. - and thereby Bavaria as such Sorry for the customers that spend money on these. I guess it will be hard to get a good price on a used 42 Match without extensive, and expensive, improvements to the hull. I'm not especially fund of Bavaria. I just think I should counterbalance the little group of sailors that seems to think that onle ineffective, non-computerised oldfashioned work is "good quality". Remember the definition of "good qulity": That is when you get exactly what you expect. Good or bad. Bjarke Hi Bjarke, In the late summer of 2003 we were looking at a larger - "new/second hand" - sailboat. We were talking to several different brokers and visiting many marinas, and what really surprised me was, that in three cases we saw different models of pretty new Bavarias on land with a big (big!) whole in the hull where the aftermost part of the keel is mounted to the hull ... Whether it has something to do with the people sailing the Bavarias or it has something to do with the construction of the same boats ... I don't know ... Anyway, we decided for another boat make, and that was fortunate enough, as we in 2005 did hit something very hard while sailing above 8 knots in fresh wind ..., but because of the construction of the hull and keel with a very strong frame inside the hull on which the keel is bolted with many bolts, the damage was not that bad (but bad enough ...), at least, we did not miss the keel, and the boat did not leak .... so we could continue the sailing ... but the floor in the cabin and the keel was in pretty bad shape - and we were shocked ... -- Flemming Torp 'kun en tåbe frygter ikke haven' |
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