Ok folks, I am going to chime in here. Not because I want to get into any sort of argument about anything, but I do want to talk about outsourcing from the side of someone who works for the largest US manufacturer of band instruments.
Outsourcing to Asia can be traced back to one company: Leblanc, and most notably, Vito Pascucci. If you look at the history of Asian musical instrument manufacturing, you can see that Vito was the first person to bring in large volumes of instruments from Asia (most notably student level band instruments from Yamaha, at that time). The reason for this is that the high cost of manufacturing in the United States. Because of this, other companies were able to become stronger players in the marketplace due to the price point that they could sell product at.
Selmer started sourcing in Asia in the mid 1990's, if my memory is correct, when they started to bring in product under the Buescher name, while UMI was bringing in trumpets (the Conn 201BY is the one that comes to my mind) around that time frame as well. Again, the reason for this is you as a customer talked with your money and didn't buy higher quality, USA-made instruments due to the price. The difference between how a company like mine sources versus others is that we don't buy anything out of a catalog. We tell the manufacturers what we are looking for, and then test the product that they build to our specifications.
However, the quality will never be to the level that you get from a large, well-established manufacturing plant. I will give you an example. Keep in mind, you pay about $2 USD a week, benefits included, to a person working in a Chinese plant.
A company that I know in China that makes saxophones under a variety of names is actually a conglomerate of 8 households that do one step in the manufacturing process. Now, I don't care how much process and culture you can build, but there's no way that 8 households can build a saxophone to the same level that Selmer Paris, Yamaha, Jupiter, Yanagisawa, or any other major manufacturer can. However, you speak with your dollar, and buy these inferior products.
I've played lots of imported tubas from China. They play fine, but the fit/finish isn't where I'd like it, no parts service, but they do serve a role in the market. Hence why we import a line of tubas under the Holton Collegiate line (keep in mind, we moved the company that sourced these to Asia because the quality went UP from the other companies that built them in the past).
If you want to talk more about this, please feel free to contact me. Like I said before, I'm not going to get into any sort of confrontation, just wanted to present a different view.
Oh and PS
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