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I had an interesting conversation with a local marine professional.
Kevin runs a business that specializes in the post-production installation of bow thrusters and stabilizers. He commented that his particular portion of the industry is now being challenged by some on-line competition, and the news for consumers is not as good as it first appears.......... "My prices have always been pretty competitive," said Kevin, "so I was really surprised when one of my prospective clients said that he wanted me to do the installation but that he was buying the bow thruster itself off the internet. I was even more surprised when the client said that he was saving about 50% on the price of the unit- I know what the best wholesale deals are and there wasn't anything close to 50% to be saved. Since I couldn't really be sure what sort of thruster he was going to buy, I passed on the chance to do the installation. If the thruster failed after he started to use it, I know that he would be calling me to complain and he wouldn't be sitting down to write an e-mail to some unkown seller living who knows where." "I mentioned this situation to somebody else in the business, and they related a similar experience. In that case, the client had already purchased the "half price" bowthruster and it had been delivered. Once again, the boat owner was looking for somebody to do the installation. A close inspection of the delivered unit revealed that it was a cheap knock-off of a brand name thruster. To the untrained eye, it looked pretty much the same as a standard unit- but in detail it wasn't all that close. My competitor was able to discover that that the counterfeit thruster was built in China and had been sold on the internet by a company actually headquartered in Mexico. Of course my competitor turned down the "installation only" job as well." Interesting development. I guess we boat owners need to ponder whether we're trying to buy a bow thruster in a box, or have a bow thruster installed in a boat. As Kevin pointed out, "The bow thruster tube is the biggest hole you will ever cut into a boat below the waterline. I wonder how many of the people who think they're saving money by buying a cheap thruster ever look far enough ahead to worry about who is going to install it or even repair it- and that's if the warranty actually turns out to be worth anything at all." Particularly for structurally related items, such as thrusters, it probably makes more sense to look at a "total installed package" rather than try to pick up the mechanical parts alone through the cheapest possible source. Few of the most highly qualified yards and installers will want anything to do with accepting the liability for the quality of the installation and being at the top of the "call list" should anything fo wrong with the machinery unless they have earned at least a modest profit on the sale of the thruster. "And don't get me started on stabilizers," said Kevin. "I just looked at a boat that had been brought up the coast from San Diego, and the owner should thank his lucky stars he made it this far. It turned out that this guy bought some cheap stabilizers off the internet, and he took his boat to a yard in Mexico to have them installed. To make a long story short, the Mexican yard crushed the coring in his hull. The boater called me to try to figure out why he heard this huge thump every time the stabilizers deployed- and what he was hearing was the inner and outer hulls banging together every time the stabilizers shifted position. People might not understand that nothing puts more stress on a hull per square inch than a stabilizer. I had to tell the guy he was one big wave away from ripping a couple of four square foot holes in the bottom of his boat." While it's important to realize that we get what we pay for, it's so often equally true that if we're not paying as much there's something we're not getting as part of the deal. When that something turns out to be a legitimate product with an actual warranty and a locally available expert installation, you have to wonder how much of a "savings" would be enough to justify the risk. As John Ruskin said, "It is not good to pay too much, but it is worse to pay too little. When you pay too much you lose a little money and that is all. When you pay too little you risk losing everything, as the thing you buy may be incapable of doing the thing it was bought to do. There is nothing in the world that some man cannot make a little worse and sell a little cheaper, and those who consider price alone are this man's lawful prey." ((Note, that's from memory- so if it isn't exactly verbatim that's why). |