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Brew Master
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How can they make it so cheap??
A good friend called me yesterday to tell me about a stand on skid steer a friend of his had bought from China. I rattled off the "usual suspects" of cheap stand on machines from China and he said "none of them". He told me he'd give me his impression of the machine once he got it uncrated and could operate it.
He called me after operating the machine and told me it "blows away" the machine he stocks and that I operated on demo. That was really surprising to me since the machine I demo'd was a very nice, and I thought operated better than Bobcat and other brands I've owned and sold. The machine comes with a Kubota diesel engine, the same model as several US brands have. I don't know about pumps, drive motors etc. From the pictures I saw, it looks well built. The package includes the machine, a brush cutter, a grapple bucket, and a regular bucket. All in, with shipping, it was a tick under $16,000. I was looking at becoming a dealer for a manufacturer who brought a machine to me to demo. Their machine was designed here but manufactured in China. My cost for that machine, while about 6K less than US made machines, would have been nearly 10K more than the one designed and built in China. That machine had a Yanmar engine, name brand pumps and drive motors and was overall very well built. I've looked at adding other brands of stand on machines but the dealer net for the US designed and manufactured machines is nearly double the first I mentioned and about 6K more than the US designed made in China machine. And none come with the attachments this one did. The attachments alone would have added more than 6K to the machine price. The issue I can see is, if the machine has issues, the owner won't be able to get parts since there is no dealer network that stocks parts. I understand that labor, regulations and raw materials, advertising for brand recognition, etc, come into play but to be that much less??? It seems like there's no way they're making money, or making a very small margin to produce and sell for that kind of number. It seems like there has to be a corner cut somewhere.
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Nick Last edited by cabmandone; 05-23-2025 at 03:18 AM.. |
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Part of it is no marketing and distribution. Another part of it is no development/engineering, they reverse engineer everything. Those $150 "clone" Husky and Sthil chainsaws? The real parts fit.
A real Prince pto hydraulic pump from the USA is like $700 or more. The Vevor clone? $150. I took mine apart just because, and its very nicely machined with plain bearings in all the right places. If I don't run it dry it'll likely outlive me. IDK about parts availability for these little machines. I suspect that the drive motors and pumps are generic. It might take a day of snooping around the internet, but if your determined I bet you could find them. The little mini ex's are cool. You see a fair number used for 3k or so that folks have bought to do one project and then move on, I've been tempted. FHM etc have done well selling Chinese farm implements here. I have their tiller. Its rudimentary but robust, and they have parts in stock. Half the price of even a County Line.
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Greg Lepore 85 Targa 05 Ducati 749s (wrecked, stupidly) 2000 K1200rs (gone, due to above) 05 ST3s (unfinished business) |
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Did you get the memo?
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Wichita, KS
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Borderline slave labor and cheap materials can save a lot. Give it six months of heavy use and I bet you’d have cracked welds and leaking hydraulics. I’ll buy disposable stuff from China but have a hard time with anything that I need to depend on.
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‘07 Mazda RX8-8 Past: 911T, 911SC, Carrera, 951s, 955, 996s, 987s, 986s, 997s, BMW 5x, C36, C63, XJR, S8, Maserati Coupe, GT500, etc |
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Kantry Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: N.S. Can
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There is another factor: reduced cost per unit through volume production.
I found it hard to get my head around until a number of years ago I had a conversation with a Dutchman who represented a manufacturing company who wanted to sell a Chinese firm a factory to make stainless steel flatware . The firm was anticipating the westernization of trends in eating. When the pitch was made for a factory which could produce a million place settings annually, it was accepted, with the stipulation they would build four plants. When you consider Chinese markets products globally, the unit cost, already low from factors such as cheap labor and government support, drops substantially. Best Les
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Best Les My train of thought has been replaced by a bumper car. |
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Brew Master
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To Greg's point about parts; That's something I'm looking into. I want to know more about the pumps, valves, drive motors which is easily discoverable. Those mini X's that sell cheap generally have a Briggs or other twin cylinder gas engine if I'm not mistaken. You can look at them and tell they're a cheap unit. This thing looks like a quality piece of equipment which blows my mind.
To Matt's point on longevity; I'm tempted to buy one and work it the way I'd work any other stand on I've operated just to see how it holds up. At 16K we've entered an entirely different level of disposable. Retail on Bobcat, Kubota, Vermeer, Ditch Witch, Case, Wacker Neuson and Scag ( I think that about covers it) is 35-39K. A new Viper runs around 32K retail. That's with just a bucket. This thing at just under 16K with attachments means a person could buy two and keep one for parts or as a spare if the first one breaks. To Les's point on global marketing, I believe Bobcat and Case are global. The reason I point to these two, Deere and Cat don't make a stand on but rather they rely on Toro and Ditch Witch to fill that void. Wacker Neuson produces a stand on but I don't know where that product is marketed. After them you have the "fill in" producers like Scag. But they all run near the same price point. To provide a little perspective on just how cheap this is, a used Bobcat MT85 with around 600 hours of use will bring around 21K. I haven't looked into it but I think this machine goes head to head with the 1000 pound lift capacity machines.
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Nick Last edited by cabmandone; 05-23-2025 at 05:14 AM.. |
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Get off my lawn!
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Much of the Chinese products have government subsidies to make them cheap, and put the competition out of business. They want to corner the market on most every product. The Chinese cars have not taken a foothold in the US yet, but I bet they are coming. I will never buy one.
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Glen 49 Year member of the Porsche Club of America 1985 911 Carrera; 2017 Macan 1986 El Camino with Fuel Injected 350 Crate Engine My Motto: I will never be too old to have a happy childhood! |
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I have a rk74. Front axle differential blew up at 20 hrs and within the first month of use. Tractor comes with a “84 month warranty” however they don’t have parts to fix it. Evidently, the S Koreans use Chinese steel and is a known issue.
That’s my experience with chinese bs…
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dolor et pavor Copyright |
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No info about stand ons, but generically:
- China manufacturing is very efficient, high automation/robot usage, high volume. Some EV manufacturing is getting close to lights-out. - Inputs from raw material to labor to components are domestically sourced and low priced. - Chinese companies work with low margins in very competitive markets. No big stock buybacks, giant CEO comp. I would worry about spares and support.
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Quote:
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Greg Lepore 85 Targa 05 Ducati 749s (wrecked, stupidly) 2000 K1200rs (gone, due to above) 05 ST3s (unfinished business) |
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Especially with no aspect of it being fixed and being blown off by rural king…
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dolor et pavor Copyright |
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I've posted before of my Son being head of cyber security for a global port/shipping container business.
I had discussed with him the hacking of navigation systems for the huge cargo ships transporting these containers around the globe. I always thought that was the biggest cyber threat to our supply chain. His work travel for over a year has been to go to major port cities (Rotterdam, Bremerhaven, Antwerp, New Jersey, Savannah, Long Beach, etc) and go up into the cranes and loading equipment with a 5G scanner and uncovering all of the Chinese chips used in the manufacture of this equipment that does surveillance and also has the ability to be "neutralized" at any time. I'm not saying this tech is dwelling in your Chinese manufactured backhoe but it should give some people pause when making equipment purchases.
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Counterclockwise?
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Rod 1986 Carrera 2001 996TT A bunch of stuff with spark plugs |
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Brew Master
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Quote:
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It's a safe bet that support is non existent and parts will be tough to source if there is a failure.
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Nick Last edited by cabmandone; 05-23-2025 at 09:31 AM.. |
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Brew Master
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I got a chance to do some more digging into the machine. They cost $13,000. There are a few videos on youtube where a guy works it pretty hard. Seems fairly durable except he did have an auxiliary pump issue.
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Let’s see how they do in the real world, over a period of months and years.
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Brew Master
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I'm intrigued by these things. If I can get my hands on one I might have to buy one just to see how they'll do. I'd really like to put it up against a Bobcat MT100, Kubota SCL1000 or similar machine just to see how it performs in an apples to apples (horsepower and lift) comparison.
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Nick |
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Brew Master
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After two months.... I'm about to find out! I contacted the guy that imported the machine and bought it off of him. My plan is to work it and see how it does. I figure for the price, I can't go too far wrong. I'll post a pic when it lands here.
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Nick |
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its public investment in manufacturing.
like there is no secret here. everyone beating us in the manufacturing game isnt doing it based on free markets, they are doing it based on massive public investment in manufacturing. Korea, Vietnam, china, etc etc. if we want to make american manufacturing more competitive world wide, thats the same thing we need to do. |
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Back in the saddle again
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Quote:
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Bingo!
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