I would sure hope so. I would love to buy American, but unfortunately, for the reasons we all know, my best tuba(s) and bass trombone are made by Yamaha.

Remember that price and cost are only related in one direction--that price has to be higher than cost. Other than that, price is controlled by the market.Doc wrote:Seems to me that over the last few years, as European prices have gone up, so have the American prices. Why, other than because they can? There's no real need for American prices to grow exponentially. Sounds like gouging or "keeping up with the Jones'".
OR, have I misinterpreted something.
You can't copyright a design. Copyrights are for expressions, not designs, and not products.rascaljim wrote:Does miraphone have their design for the 186 under copywrite? The reason I ask is because there are also tubas by Meinl Weston 25(not as close as the others but still similar) as well as Yamaha 641 that are similar to the 186 design as well. Also, what came first, the miraphone or the MW?
Food for thought
Jim
Cerveny. And the IP rights ran out on that design a LONG time ago. I'm no [edit-- I said copyright, but Rick's right, it should be 'patent'] attorney, but I'd bet that all Jin Bao has to do to avoid an infringement case is to slightly change the name, and slightly change the design. Move a ferrule a half-inch, for example. Just about anything to make it "different".rascaljim wrote: Also, what came first, the miraphone or the MW?
Another response to a weak dollar is that it will once again be cost-effective to make things with U.S. labor. A strong dollar is good for consumers, but a weaker dollar is better for manufacturing workers.bloke wrote:Going back to the "low USD value" thing...
There are good and bad sides to everything.
The problem this time around is that the US is a LONG way off from being the cheapest place to build things, even with a 75% drop in the value of the dollar against the Euro (which certainly will mean big-time inflation here), it's still cheaper to make things in southeast Asia.Rick Denney wrote: Another response to a weak dollar is that it will once again be cost-effective to make things with U.S. labor. A strong dollar is good for consumers, but a weaker dollar is better for manufacturing workers.
Rick "thinking that's why China keeps bolstering the dollar whenever it can" Denney