Gale Hawkins
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2009
- Messages
- 12,426
- Location
- Murray, KY
- Tractor
- 1948 Allis Chambers Model B 1976 265 MF / 1983 JD 310B Backhoe / 1966 Ford 3000 Diesel / 1980 3600 Diesel
Then there is the Howard Hughes movie.
I knew friends that had factories in several countries. They drove Buicks, and up here had a 20 square foot kitchen with a bar fridge. But, they didn't owe anyone for anything. And never owned a single STATUS symbol. The people that owe, have resaurant size kitchens that most never use. This ridiculous conspicuous consumption will be the death of our society.
SOME? I bet MOST will lift more than the front axle is rated for.
SR
I have no doubt that like some that have a fake Rolex watch, some have a fake (Kioti) Kubota tractor. lol
Kubota is one of the only companies that engineer and manufacture the whole tractor top to bottom, including the engine. They are most certainly not assembling parts as you say. Wheels/tires are the only major parts they sub out. They even make their own loaders and buckets.
They build their own tractors, but they outsource some components just like every company in the world.
They build their own tractors, but they outsource some components just like every company in the world.
"Some" = extremely minimal in the case of Kubota, which sets them apart from most other tractor makers. Looking over a Kubota tractor will make this obvious.
Something we haven't touched on yet is a company's culture - and how that culture affects the final product. I think that's important.
In my experience, a company that does a lot of their own basic manufacturing has a completely different internal culture than one that mostly assembles parts from other suppliers.
rScotty
How would you know by looking at it what parts they made in house and what they outsourced?
...... SNIP .....
.... but outsourcing some components is just the nature of the business. I'll also wager that with Kubota continuing to grow as it is they will continue to look outside the company where it is needed to satisfy business targets.
Of course we can't know whether a part was outsourced by looking at it, but that doesn't mean that there is nothing to be learned by looking.
I'm going to argue that the best designs are refined designs, and that one can tell a refined design by looking.
If so, it is the refinement - rather than who made the part - that makes the difference.
There are certain quality indications that your eye will pick up. Maybe that was what s219 was thinking when he said, " Looking over a Kubota tractor will make this obvious."
Here's why: Whether a part was made in house or outsourced probably makes less difference than who approves the design. specifications, and production of that part.
That because the decision on design is going to be made in house, whether the part itself is or not.
And so far as we know, the knowledge to make that decision best comes from the experience of having made it yourself at one time, experienced the problems, and refined the design.
I think what we have been saying is that a refined design has certain qualities that can be noticed by eye. I'd agree with that.
rScotty
See I think your back peddling some here. As we now are on some level of agreeing that brand X of any piece equipment doesnt make a lot of its own parts, how much will vary. But even on design, Just because Kubota is approving a part spec its better, thats a large leap of faith there, now one could argue Kubota demands a higher spec then sat JG, Mahindra, etc that may be true, but I dont think youll find any data suggesting such in overall terms.
I think the argument you are trying to make or want to make is Kubota designs, procures(from others) parts, and assembles a superior machine. The argument and their own advertisement from Kubota of being house on everything or most everything is simply not true. Now Kubota does make a good machine priced right or not I believe that to be fact. Now saying Kubota is the best machine probably more brand pride than any sort of actual fact.
I think the actual question we were trying to answer is why some tractor brands cost more than others. I think that one factor - a very important factor - is whether the company culture leans towards making things in house or outsourcing. That's not an argument against outsourcing,
It's just my belief that that a company which leans toward in house manufacture will probably be in a better position to accurately define the best quality than one that leans towards outsourcing to reduce cost. Regardless of who makes the part.
That, and that said quality can often be detected by eye in the final product. Quality shows....and costs.
I know it's not an "all or nothing" test.... just one more factor - and does somewhat explain a cost difference.
rScotty
See I think your back peddling some here. As we now are on some level of agreeing that brand X of any piece equipment doesnt make a lot of its own parts, how much will vary. But even on design, Just because Kubota is approving a part spec its better, thats a large leap of faith there, now one could argue Kubota demands a higher spec then sat JG, Mahindra, etc that may be true, but I dont think youll find any data suggesting such in overall terms.
I think the argument you are trying to make or want to make is Kubota designs, procures(from others) parts, and assembles a superior machine. The argument and their own advertisement from Kubota of being in house on everything or most everything is simply not true. Now Kubota does make a good machine priced right or not I believe that to be fact. Now saying Kubota is the best machine probably more brand pride than any sort of actual fact.
Actually Kubota did have Bradco make the backhoe for my loader and a company called H&H makes, or made most of their buckets.
I sell a lot of brands of equipment and some is good and some is not!
when your in the line of work that Art and I are, you quickly see that all equipment is not created equal. Somehow that impression is being lost on the internet. Owners of mediocre products will defend its virtues so their personal thinking that they made the right choice stays intact (lots of studies on this) and you end up with a 'everything is good, everyone wins' consensus so no one is offended.