by waaytoomuchintothis » Fri Feb 08, 2013 11:13 am
El Sucko has a good point, as always. There is a reasonable assumption of specific quality that is not necessarily an assumption of best quality. In the case of a slot car, it may be reasonably assumed to be functional as a slot car. When it isn't, it is reasonable to squawk. In that statement is another set of assumptions, such as the assumption that if it has magnets in it, its functionality has be judged in the general area of a magnet track, the same idea as El Sockerino's 1:24 reference. So far, we aren't talking about quality control, however.
"Quality control problem" more properly refers to the failure to achieve minimum standards, not excellence. The overlap happens when superior quality control slips to minimums, the most poignant example of which would be the recent Scalextric goofs. After many years of good-to-excellent quality, something went gorky at Hornby and they produced a series of dumb mistakes, not only in quality of product, but oddly, in choice of product to produce.
Hard times in Europe and elsewhere have done in a number of slot car resources, and injured all of them. Poor Jules was double clobbered, and is fighting his way back. But he ceased to produce rather than make something crappy. I'm a Pioneer fan largely because of that attitude. I love the cars, too, but Jules is a hero. Jules knows that quality is fluid. If, for example, a "good" slot car suddenly costs twice as much as it did, the quality (that is, value per dollar), is cut in half inescapably. If, at the same time, quality controls slips, that should be a death rattle for the manufacturer, but with people committed to collecting regardless of quality or value or anything else, we still have them hanging around, tempting other manufacturers to hike up prices.
In short, after more than a decade of the most extraordinary quality and choice slot cars have ever had, we are experiencing a crisis that seems more urgent than it may be. We are still arguably in a valhalla of slot car stuff, just not quite as care free as we were just a few years ago. But the most injured manufacturers are on the mend, and though the big outfits were late to show troubles, they will no doubt also recover. For some of the bigs, there are bad decisions to get past, for others, a reality check in the leadership offices will help a lot. The situation is fluid, and the direction is toward recovery. Frankly, its a wonder we weren't much more injured by all this financial turmoil.
Also, when a steakhouse offers sushi (its not food, its bait), the owner is oblivious of the normal risks of doing business, and the person who orders it is just dumb, proving once again why it is not reasonable to perpetuate and bad decision by a manufacturer. They will just keep doing it. Collectors beware! Your patronage is misplaced.