
https://read.dukeupress.edu/easts/artic ... 1Hsieh.pdf
cyclemad wrote:can you summarise this as I started losing the will to live halfway through the second page...sorry
Airsporter1st wrote:cyclemad wrote:can you summarise this as I started losing the will to live halfway through the second page...sorry
Summary: The Taiwanese do cycles better and cheaper than in the West.
reohn2 wrote:Airsporter1st wrote:cyclemad wrote:can you summarise this as I started losing the will to live halfway through the second page...sorry
Summary: The Taiwanese do cycles better and cheaper than in the West.
Quite right.
I've not long since finished reading The Dancing Chain by Frank J Berto.
If I take anything away with me from that book it's how the Japanese,Chinese and Taiwanese manufacturers did their R&D diligently and innovatively whilst the European,UK and US manufacturers,including Campagnolo,didn't,and suffered greatly as a consequence.
The European,US and UK cycling industries seem to be the same story as the UK car and motorcycle industries.
Samuel D wrote:I wonder how much longer this decentralised or otherwise Taiwan Inc will wait before going after Shimano.
horizon wrote:Just in case we haven't mentioned him, here's a Wiki article about Deming:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W._Edwards_Deming
I think it's dangerous to credit one man with anything but the West certainly missed a trick.
My last new bike (a Tern) was built in Vietnam. I find it hard to understand why someone would not be interested in where and how their bike was made, not just to know that it was made well but that the people making it weren't exploited or poisoned or their environment polluted. Maybe the myth that British is best leads makers to hide their origins. The paucity of information on product origin is peculiar to say the least.