by waaytoomuchintothis » Mon Nov 25, 2013 11:22 am
Whereas I am on Mark's side of this- simply stated, there is another feature that overrides any other.
The fact is, when you spend money for something and it isn't what it claims to be, you have been cheated. If a car is cheap because it is flawed, I have no complaint, but parts missing, critical assembly errors, painting errors, etc, are not the same thing. Incredibly, some of the worst cars out there are among the most expensive (i.e. Pinkcar has passable bodies that can be nicely fixed up, but crappy chassis and dollar for value, they are the most expensive cars out there, lots of RTR resin cars have beautiful bodies but run like they have square wheels, etc, and they cost a ridiculous amount of money, Ninco's famous wobble gears and bent axles wouldn't be such a big deal if they weren't insanely overpriced, especially since for most of their existence, they were not crazy priced).
I love tweaking and tuning cars, and I don't mind making the rear tire changes we do now that there are such wonderful tires to buy in the market. I will replace gears willingly, especially pinions, and all the rest of the easy and cheap improvements, but misaligned wheels, broken wheels, bent axles, stripped screws, and other serious problems require a reduction in price for the whole brand if not corrected over time. For example, have you ever bought a new Pinkcar that ran properly out of the box? Even once? And they cost more than Scalextric, SCX, Fly, and other consistent cars. Now that SCX and Fly are in trouble, comparisons to them have little grounding, but the troubled times are a fraction of the time they have been around.
It all comes down to this for me... I love fixing them up, but when they cost a lot more than they should to begin with, I feel cheated when I have to fix them up a lot just to get them to run. A $50 car better not cost me $40 to make it run. By the same token, a $100 car will be returned by me if it takes $5 to make it run.