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On Feb 2, 2:14*am, (Michel Talon) wrote:
...The glider factories seem to think that glider buyers are like Ferrari buyers, who will accept to pay any price for their toys... Michel, I think that you have hit the nail on the head. The glider makers are acting just as you say. And the reason they are doing so seems to be that they are correct in their assessment; that there continues to be folks who will pay top dollar for high-performance sailplanes. What I don't understand is why you seem to take issue with it. Do you think that it is unjust or unfair for them to want to make a profit? In order to make at least enough money to stay in business, the established glider manufacturers have focused their development and production on gliders for which they can command the highest prices and so make the most profit: high-performance racing machines with cutting-edge aerodynamics and many pilot-friendly amenities. And who can blame them? That is what businesses do. The business of business is definitely business. Expecting any business to do otherwise means that you consider it a charity and begs the question, how much time or money have you donated lately? Furthermore, there is absolutely no evidence that the established glider manufacturers are making excessive profits as we have seen among greedy Wall Street bankers. We don't see their CEOs flying around in business jets, and their top managers and engineers don't get huge bonuses and live in mansions. In fact, when I met the man who is arguable the best and most prolific sailplane designer ever, he was wearing a grubby T-shirt and sweeping out a hangar with a borrowed broom. To my way of thinking, just about the only folks who make gliders for free are those who expect to hold posession of said glider when they're done. That certainly describes the sailplane homebuilders with whom I hold the honor and privilege of working. But it doesn't and needn't describe businesses that are in the business of making gliders. Thanks, and best regards Bob K. |
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