I've been building YouTube video's on aftermarket parts, some here have seen them some not, (might post links, but not the focus of this thread) and a thought has been nagging at me as I've been doing this saw CAD thing the last 10 years....WHAT is Husqvarna thinking!!!! This started back in 2009 when I build a 272 with a Bailey's Aftermarket top end, nice looking part; but wasn't a match of a stocker. Had built a tweaked 268 open port that ate its lunch. BUT the price was right at around $100 bucks and the guy who owned the saw was happy as he was back to cutting with a price point he could afford. He didn't have the money to go to a typical dealer for repair much less buy a new saw! AND he heated with wood (a growing trend as energy/taxation prices make folks struggle...a salient point to this discussion but another topic in of itself)
Now there are piles of 365/372 Cylinder / Piston replacement options, (digging through some in the YouTube video's, and NOT just Cylinder's, Pull Start's, Ignitions Modules...everything) many top end rebuild options for under $50 directly from the Pacific rim. Before you use the old "you get what you pay for" logic, some of those option's are really the same as relabeled "name" aftermarket offerings that have come on the market, just eBay allows you to get them closer to their source taking a middle reseller or two out of the price structure...so still What is Husky thinking!
Some and maybe most of those Pacific rim Cylinder/Piston offerings are reverse engineered from OEM...and not quite there in terms of matching port timing and internal dimensions. Obviously most are good enough to run well, just not quite as well as a stocker. And some are approaching stock casting quality even though the internals are different....a trend. 10 years from now, even five years from now that gap will certainly be less. (What is Husky thinking?)
Of course there has been AM offerings that approach OEM such as Meteor products for a while. And the sales channels for those have included eBay but mostly through dealer support distribution channels. The pacific rim $50 dollar options thru eBay have just destroyed the price structure as now customers have an easy way to get these AM part's, many the same as their dealers; for the same price the saw dealers are buying them for. ..... You all get this. So why am I questioning Husqvarna's spare parts marketing strategy??
Because for me to buy an OEM cylinder for something like a 372xp, I have to pay close to $300 dollars!!! Even through eBay they go for the high $200's. Meteor top end's are better at the $150 range. I essentially built on a set of OEM cases a Pacific Rim copy saw for $200 complete with top end, all the plastic, ignition & even pull starts! That's why the Pacific rim offerings are going to flood the market and make it tough on dealers over time. Then by inference Husqvarna
Before you take the "you get what you pay for" attitude, yea; the saw I built isn't a match of stock. But it cuts pretty well. Certainly better than any $250 dollar new option out there. Of course the next question is ... for how long! Going to document that over time.
I don't use Pacific Rim AM Cylinder's on the saws I fix for real, usually use Meteor or clean up OEM where possible. I now give those I fix saws for an AM option simply because they usually have been on eBay and put those prices in my face; then sell into the better OEM or Meteor parts when possible. OR tell them to get the parts and I will twist the wrenches. BUT there is a place for those AM Pacific rim parts. And that is because of the cost differential between them and OEM. (What are they thinking)
And that's why I ask....WHAT is Husqvarna Thinking!!!! The market place for replacement parts is rapidly changing. The distribution channels are way different than when the current spare parts market strategy was designed. I have to say a $150 dollar OEM option would cut the AM Pacific Rim offerings sold in HALF. Most would spend the extra $75-$100 go get back to stock, And until the AM offerings match OEM....that would stem the tide of these knock off but not quite up to stock quality parts.
Get with the program Husqvarna! Before they tear a gapping hole in your dealers repair business. Pricing differently would help dealers, and even do it your self customer types to stick with your supply channels / dealers and ultimately the brand as well. AND every one know when the saw bites it, its ALWAYS the brand name sucks. Even if under the covers is all AM built by a hack (I'm a hack!) like my demo Pacific Rim saw. Brand loyalty is worth something. They need to flex with market trends!
BTW, not that it matter's; I still think for a pro, OEM is the best way to go. Not even close! AND these saw's I built for the video's are going to be used on the farm until they die, they are not now or ever will be sold in this configuration. My angst is a result of being a young manufacturing engineer tasked with justifying, selecting, installing, and programming CNC machine tools back when the home grown machine tool industry (G&L, Cincinnati Milacron, Burgmaster etc) was just gutted by Pacific Rim offerings such as Makino, Okuma, Niigata, Matsuura etc, and it didn't have to go that way. This feels similar to me.
Now there are piles of 365/372 Cylinder / Piston replacement options, (digging through some in the YouTube video's, and NOT just Cylinder's, Pull Start's, Ignitions Modules...everything) many top end rebuild options for under $50 directly from the Pacific rim. Before you use the old "you get what you pay for" logic, some of those option's are really the same as relabeled "name" aftermarket offerings that have come on the market, just eBay allows you to get them closer to their source taking a middle reseller or two out of the price structure...so still What is Husky thinking!
Some and maybe most of those Pacific rim Cylinder/Piston offerings are reverse engineered from OEM...and not quite there in terms of matching port timing and internal dimensions. Obviously most are good enough to run well, just not quite as well as a stocker. And some are approaching stock casting quality even though the internals are different....a trend. 10 years from now, even five years from now that gap will certainly be less. (What is Husky thinking?)
Of course there has been AM offerings that approach OEM such as Meteor products for a while. And the sales channels for those have included eBay but mostly through dealer support distribution channels. The pacific rim $50 dollar options thru eBay have just destroyed the price structure as now customers have an easy way to get these AM part's, many the same as their dealers; for the same price the saw dealers are buying them for. ..... You all get this. So why am I questioning Husqvarna's spare parts marketing strategy??
Because for me to buy an OEM cylinder for something like a 372xp, I have to pay close to $300 dollars!!! Even through eBay they go for the high $200's. Meteor top end's are better at the $150 range. I essentially built on a set of OEM cases a Pacific Rim copy saw for $200 complete with top end, all the plastic, ignition & even pull starts! That's why the Pacific rim offerings are going to flood the market and make it tough on dealers over time. Then by inference Husqvarna
Before you take the "you get what you pay for" attitude, yea; the saw I built isn't a match of stock. But it cuts pretty well. Certainly better than any $250 dollar new option out there. Of course the next question is ... for how long! Going to document that over time.
I don't use Pacific Rim AM Cylinder's on the saws I fix for real, usually use Meteor or clean up OEM where possible. I now give those I fix saws for an AM option simply because they usually have been on eBay and put those prices in my face; then sell into the better OEM or Meteor parts when possible. OR tell them to get the parts and I will twist the wrenches. BUT there is a place for those AM Pacific rim parts. And that is because of the cost differential between them and OEM. (What are they thinking)
And that's why I ask....WHAT is Husqvarna Thinking!!!! The market place for replacement parts is rapidly changing. The distribution channels are way different than when the current spare parts market strategy was designed. I have to say a $150 dollar OEM option would cut the AM Pacific Rim offerings sold in HALF. Most would spend the extra $75-$100 go get back to stock, And until the AM offerings match OEM....that would stem the tide of these knock off but not quite up to stock quality parts.
Get with the program Husqvarna! Before they tear a gapping hole in your dealers repair business. Pricing differently would help dealers, and even do it your self customer types to stick with your supply channels / dealers and ultimately the brand as well. AND every one know when the saw bites it, its ALWAYS the brand name sucks. Even if under the covers is all AM built by a hack (I'm a hack!) like my demo Pacific Rim saw. Brand loyalty is worth something. They need to flex with market trends!
BTW, not that it matter's; I still think for a pro, OEM is the best way to go. Not even close! AND these saw's I built for the video's are going to be used on the farm until they die, they are not now or ever will be sold in this configuration. My angst is a result of being a young manufacturing engineer tasked with justifying, selecting, installing, and programming CNC machine tools back when the home grown machine tool industry (G&L, Cincinnati Milacron, Burgmaster etc) was just gutted by Pacific Rim offerings such as Makino, Okuma, Niigata, Matsuura etc, and it didn't have to go that way. This feels similar to me.