Columns Retired Columns & Blogs |
The manufacturer in question charged a huge, huge increase of many tiimes over the original cost, without making any improvements, while implying significant improvements had been made.
Recently, there has been a on-line furor over an audio manufacturer having supposedly re-badged another manufacturer's component as its own (with a sweeping price increase). This <A HREF="http://forum.stereophile.com/forum/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=80790">prac... has been going on for years: Some high-end audio manufacturers have always taken mass-market components and used them as the basis for their own products. How do you feel about this?
It proves the power of online communities. Other than that, I feel bad for the poor, stupid exec at Lexicon who gave the green light for what became devastating backspatter. Let's face it, Lexicon did so because they couldn't sell enough of their own to justify development costs. I doubt they will sell more of any products. I'd like to have the opinion of some Lexicon dealers, though.
How do you know what standards of construction were employed? While is true that not all mass-market gear is junk, I don't want to waste time auditioning a component just because of the name on it. Re-badging that way simply cheapens the brand name.
I don't like it because most of the high-end manufacturers don't add much except a nice milled aluminum front, but don't really know or have much control over the bits they resell. The Pioneer-based, so-called high-end DVD players are a good example, because the kits all had the chroma bug to one degree or another, but Pioneer used to be the only company that sold customizable kits.
It seems that high-end audio companies have no expertise on the digital side when it comes to decoding chips. So to play in the digital world (computer-stored music), high-end audio has no choice but to catch-up with mass-market digital chips by using them as a platform. Mass-market digital has come so far in recent years, it's scary!
It's a rip-off when there is no change other than the front cover. But there is nothing wrong when another manufacturer's unit is modified and sold under another name. How is this any different than millions of CD/DVD transports that manufacturers have outsourced for years to put in their own players?
I like it because a product is more than one part, it's the sum of the parts, ie, how they are used and implemented. Some manufacturers may use the component(s) more intelligently and successfully. If a component is already in use, there is proof of concept and real-world testing built in—this will save more in R&D costs, even if there is a mark-up by the borrowing manufacturer. Saturating the market with the best technology will raise benchmark standards and drive prices lower. In the long run, it increases competition and benefits the consumer. Consistently cutting-edge manufacturers will continue to be rewarded with more market share.
It depends. I would be very upset to have a brew-pub re-badge a McDonald's Hamburger as their own, but if I ordered a coffee, I wouldn't mind even if I paid $1 more than what it would cost at Starbucks. It's okay for manufacturers to share raw parts (caps, resisters, ICs, tubes, etc) but if they are using the same implementation of the raw components, then the joke is on us.
A customer can have a brand loyalty and get scammed into spending thousands more the the original product from the main supplier. I know that the circuit board for a low-cost phono preamp ended up in a number of different cases with different names, but because they were all under $200 who would really want to pitch a fit? If one laid claim that one was better than the other, now we have an issue.
It is a total rip-off and a shame: Not only are "high-end" companies now assembling their products abroad, but they are using the most critical parts/components from other companies, basically using nicer looking casing, maybe better internal cabling, fancy-named bogus proprietary DAC technology, etc. (Let's not forget the infamous hypnotic glowing blue light) And then raising the price several fold while only offering a one or two year warranty. What a joke. Despite being aware of Veblen's (1899) "conspicuous consumption" concept, I am still surprised that people with a brain (and ears on each side) can accept this and pay that much for so little (more). Now that the $499 Oppo is listed as Stereophile Class A+ (is a new category A++ coming up for the 83SE?), I don't see what's left for Ayre, Lexicon, Theta, etc.
If sincere changes have been made to significantly improve the product—say by adding tubes to an already fine CD player—fantastic. Just admit to as much, instead of placing the whole chassis of the old product in your nice billet aluminum case. A disc transport alone is fine without credit. But not the entire product.