T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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780.1 | thats Shimano for you... | EUCLID::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO8-3/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Tue Jul 19 1988 11:05 | 9 |
| George is probably right: parts for Shimano stuff are darn near
impossible to get, even for dealers! That's the primary difference
in them (and Suntour) vs. Campy when you get rid of all the hype.
Paul Randazzo (who's moved his shop back into his basement) can
tell some horror stories about trying to contact Shimano via their
special "Dealer Only" number.
Looks like you'll have to bite the bullet and buy a complete
replacement. (ps - I've got some Campy thumb shifters that I don't
need. Am willing to sell.) - Chris
|
780.2 | It gets worse... | MIST::IVERSON | a Brubeck beat in a Sousa world | Tue Jul 19 1988 16:41 | 33 |
| Not only do you have to get a whole new shifter for the sake of
a few parts, but you will find you that you will probably have to
purchase a *whole new pair* of shifters with housing cable and all.
I *just* went through this whole excercise after picking little
bits of the right Deore index shifter out of the trail as a result
of a rather spectacular endo last week. With the exception of a
tiny gash on the saddle and that one shifter being sheared in half
the bike was unscathed.
Sounds like no big deal. After all how much can *a* shifter cost?
I could not convince any shop to break up a set into right and left
much less try for small parts. And, by the way, most shops only
carry the top-of-the-line Deore XT as replacements, even though
they could not tell me why I should upgrade into a functionally
identical part that I could not fix either, if something happened.
I finally found a shop that gave a couple of dollar discount for
a set (with unuseable cables and housing) taken off of a new bike
and therefore not packaged. Somehow, $24 feels like a high price
to pay for a single Shimano Deore thumb shifter. :-{
What I find scariest about all this is that this "replace the bike
for a dinged part" marketing philosophy is being used on Mountain
Bikes which by definition is bound to be hard on parts. i.e. They
obviously knew ahead of time that replacement parts would be required.
Welcome to the modular, throw away society!
(and thanks for letting me get that off my chest:-} )
Thom
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780.3 | parts? | BANZAI::FISHER | Keep 'em rollin' | Wed Jul 27 1988 06:02 | 10 |
| You expect folks to carry replacements for everything? That's billions
and billions of parts. That carrying cost of being able to inventory
such things is huge. What would you say if they said, "Yes we can get
you a new spring and widget for, let's see $8 for the widget and $6
for the spring, plus $3 for S&H." Didi you ever order a small part
for a car?
Sure Campy can replace any part but wait till you see what they cost.
ed
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780.4 | Hi Ed. | MENTOR::REG | Just browsing; HONEST, I'm BROKE ! | Wed Jul 27 1988 11:44 | 23 |
| re .3 Me thinks Ed is teasing us.
We do all know, don't we, that "carrying cost of inventory" is
an accounting notion ?
That "cost per square foot of storage for parts" is an accounting
notion ?
That "costs of processing parts orders" is also just an
accounting notion ?
That the cost to the business of NOT supporting the product
is ultimately the business itself ?
i.e. these things are just ways of dividing up the total cost
of running the business. It can lead to identifying areas where
the business should be made more efficient, but it should NOT lead
to identifying areas of the business that should be discontinued
IF THEY ARE NECESSARY TO SUPPORT THE WHOLE BUSINESS.
Reg
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780.5 | We'll have to organize a, ahem, Consumer's Union. | BANZAI::FISHER | Keep 'em rollin' | Sat Dec 31 1988 15:31 | 7 |
| I guess Reg has the right idea. We must refuse to patronize the
dealers and manufacturors who do not supply small replacement parts
at reasonable prices. That'll teach 'em.
Or will it?
ed
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780.6 | Yes, it affects my major buying decisions. | MENTOR::REG | Just browsing; HONEST, I'm BROKE ! | Sat Dec 31 1988 17:11 | 17 |
|
re .6 Well, I don't know that I ACTIVELY BOYCOTT (sp ?)
dealers/manufacturers that don't support their product, but it does
seem that I tend toward places like George Gamache in Fitchburg
and the Bicycle Exchange in Cambridge. Maybe this is a pssive sort
of a protest_against_one/endorsement_of_the_other, but *_I_* feel better
knowing that I've bought a bike from someone who probably has parts
for it.
Let's not get too much into our own business, but if dec didn't
put literally millions of dollars into parts every year and hadn't
been doing so for a long time, its doubtfull that we would be where
we are today. I KNOW that service and services at dec are run at
a profit, but they're also necessary to support the sales business.
R
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780.7 | Wrong date, dudes! | USWAV8::CLELAND | Speed is the essence of mayhem... | Wed Nov 30 1988 09:42 | 9 |
|
Re .5/.6
Awright guys, enough already! It's not the 31st of December!
What possibly caused those notes to be entered with that date???
Confused ?
Face.
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