Re: Kioti Isn\'t Worth the Risk
Rat -
<font color=blue>Ranchman, if its so easy, why not offer it?</font color=blue>
Sounds like you want to hear my "guesses" I alluded to in my earlier post - well - OK...
I suspect that it has to do with consumer cost. Kioti (& other "non-big 3 brands") main marketing focus seems to be on price leadership for a given performance level.
Example: Before Toyota introduced the "Lexus" line and Nissan introduced the "Infiniti" line, they simply did not offer products to compete with Mercedes, BMW, & the like. Didn't mean that Toyota/Nissan made bad products, but that they simply chose to focus on a different market segment. As I said in an earlier post, I AGREE that they are eliminating a sizeable portion of the tractor buying public. I just don't know what their business plan is and why HST doesn't fit in to it.
<font color=blue>Where does my opinion say anything about "poor quality". </font color=blue>..... <font color=blue>Don't read between the lines</font color=blue>
Hmmm - your statement that Kioti <font color=blue> "...lacks the engineering to have HST"</font color=blue> seemed pretty straight forward to me. My read was that you were saying Kioti engineers are not as good as engineers for other brands that put out HST - ergo if they have "poor" engineering, than it follows that their products would be poor as well. (i.e. I can't think of anything that is "poorly engineered" that is a "top notch" product).
Maybe that isn't the way you meant it, but I didn't think I made a "big leap" to this perspective based on your original statement.
<font color=blue>It may not be rocket science, but plenty of companies have taken a stab at it and failed miserably. </font color=blue>
Can't argue with that - All I'm saying is that I strongly suspect that Kioti (or other "off" brands) could introduce HST as an option if they wanted to. I mean HST has been around a long enough time that any company should be able to introduce it. Sure, there would be a learning curve (as with anything) but it doesn't necessarily follow that Kioti HST would be unreliable just because it was new.
Rat -
<font color=blue>Ranchman, if its so easy, why not offer it?</font color=blue>
Sounds like you want to hear my "guesses" I alluded to in my earlier post - well - OK...
I suspect that it has to do with consumer cost. Kioti (& other "non-big 3 brands") main marketing focus seems to be on price leadership for a given performance level.
Example: Before Toyota introduced the "Lexus" line and Nissan introduced the "Infiniti" line, they simply did not offer products to compete with Mercedes, BMW, & the like. Didn't mean that Toyota/Nissan made bad products, but that they simply chose to focus on a different market segment. As I said in an earlier post, I AGREE that they are eliminating a sizeable portion of the tractor buying public. I just don't know what their business plan is and why HST doesn't fit in to it.
<font color=blue>Where does my opinion say anything about "poor quality". </font color=blue>..... <font color=blue>Don't read between the lines</font color=blue>
Hmmm - your statement that Kioti <font color=blue> "...lacks the engineering to have HST"</font color=blue> seemed pretty straight forward to me. My read was that you were saying Kioti engineers are not as good as engineers for other brands that put out HST - ergo if they have "poor" engineering, than it follows that their products would be poor as well. (i.e. I can't think of anything that is "poorly engineered" that is a "top notch" product).
Maybe that isn't the way you meant it, but I didn't think I made a "big leap" to this perspective based on your original statement.
<font color=blue>It may not be rocket science, but plenty of companies have taken a stab at it and failed miserably. </font color=blue>
Can't argue with that - All I'm saying is that I strongly suspect that Kioti (or other "off" brands) could introduce HST as an option if they wanted to. I mean HST has been around a long enough time that any company should be able to introduce it. Sure, there would be a learning curve (as with anything) but it doesn't necessarily follow that Kioti HST would be unreliable just because it was new.