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  1. #46
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    Buy British. Today in the U.K. we cannot do that. Cars, no Rover. Trains, either hand built steam trains at over £3m, or imported from Italy. Record Tools, hardly any production, the mills in Sheffield are vacant. Computers, Spectrum, BBC, gone to make way for PC's and Macs. Hi Fi, maybe 1 Scottish producer.There is little British product to buy. Chinese tools? No thanks. Second hand prices have shot through the roof.

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  3. #47
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    Charleville is offline Nocturnal and primeval - I fish at night.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mike Wingate View Post
    Buy British. Today in the U.K. we cannot do that. Cars, no Rover. Trains, either hand built steam trains at over £3m, or imported from Italy. Record Tools, hardly any production, the mills in Sheffield are vacant. Computers, Spectrum, BBC, gone to make way for PC's and Macs. Hi Fi, maybe 1 Scottish producer.There is little British product to buy. Chinese tools? No thanks. Second hand prices have shot through the roof.


    So what does Britain produce these days? Where does the income come from?



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  4. #48
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    Most employment there as here is in transport, construction, retail trade, 'hospitality', administration, and professional and community services. Manufacturing employment here is < 20% of the total.
    Cheers, Ern

  5. #49
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    Charleville is offline Nocturnal and primeval - I fish at night.
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    Quote Originally Posted by rsser View Post
    Most employment there as here is in transport, construction, retail trade, 'hospitality', administration, and professional and community services. Manufacturing employment here is < 20% of the total.
    Hmmm. Most of that seems to be internally focussed. A country still has to produce saleable stuff, otherwise it would trend towards poverty. (I think! )

    Here we sell minerals, tourism (which I guess is also pretty big in the UK), education, farm outputs and expertise (ie project management of big overseas projects).

    So I expect that Britain has other exportable outputs, also. I would not think that they would be so big in the things that we are big in so that is why I thought that manufacturing might be their core activity. After all, that is where the industrial revolution started.



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  6. #50
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    The U.K. makes some money by selling it's gold reserves. The theatre and music. Call centres are outsourced in India, our plumbers and builders are Polish. Thousands of offices do administration. And the odd F1 race car. Rolls Royce sold to the Germans, Bentley to VW (Germans). No apprentice schemes.

  7. #51
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    Depends how you measure economic activity. Employment is one way; value of goods and services traded another. Not nec in sync. Look at our energy and mineral exports in relation to numbers employed in those industries.
    Cheers, Ern

  8. #52
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    i just bought 2 dmt duosharp 10 inch whetstones from amazon.com for a total inc shipping AU$321.65.

    carbatec brisbane would have charged me AU$498 for the exact same products.

    i like to support local business but this is ridiculous......

    regards, justin.

  9. #53
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    ...same boat as Justin.
    A nice package from the US arrived on my doorstep last Tuesday. All up total cost AU$485.
    Exact merchandise purchased in OZ would have cost me AU$684 plus freight from Victoria.
    Now I don't mind paying a little more over here, but the above math just doesn't compute, and I know I did the right thing by ME.
    This argument can go on and on and on...just do what feels right in your circumstance and you feel comfortable doing it.

    Cheers

    Glenn

  10. #54
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    Quote Originally Posted by justinmcf View Post
    i just bought 2 dmt duosharp 10 inch whetstones from amazon.com for a total inc shipping AU$321.65.

    carbatec brisbane would have charged me AU$498 for the exact same products.

    i like to support local business but this is ridiculous......

    regards, justin.
    Did you look at these? Diamond Sharpening Plates
    I make things, I just take a long time.

    www.brandhouse.net.au

  11. #55
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    thanks waldo, i did look at the dmt diamond plates. 2 reasons i chose not to buy these are, i prefer the diamond encrusted in the plastic plate and i also prefer the larger 250mm plates. those provided in your link only range from 150mm to 200mm.

    anyway, over the years i have tried all types of sharpening, oilstones, diamond stones, etc, etc, i really like the 10inch/250mm dmt duosharp whetstones.

    trent from harold and saxon also recommends them for his chisels.
    and philip marcou from marcouplanes recommends them for his own plane blades, so they cant be too shabby.

    regards, justin.

  12. #56
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    250mm would be good. Likewise I have tried wet stone, oil, wet & dry and am currently using the fine and extra fine stones with great results. I just have to make up a cradle for the DMT stones.
    I make things, I just take a long time.

    www.brandhouse.net.au

  13. #57
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    Quote Originally Posted by brisbanefitter View Post
    some of those selling on the net at low prices have little to no overheads, possibly some kind of warehousing but minimal staff.
    thos who charge higher amount you may find are large well established operations with multiple store locations, 100's of staff, warehousing costs etc etc etc.
    how many web sellers have a store front with actual people you can talk to, face to face over a counter?
    Just to give an etailers take on this, and having had a traditional store for many years previously, I can say the overheads are about the same if not slightly more and webstores are certainly not a cheap alternative to a real shop if you want to do it properly. (ebayers and garage gurus notwithstanding)

    The bit you actually see is only the tip of the iceberg, behind the scenes there's usually a massive amount of coding and development which can be very expensive and requires constant maintenance, add to that the cost of simply adding 1 product (which can take up to a day with full photography and editing), throw in some packing materials and labour for every sale and mix lightly with around 5% total gross deduction in fees from merchant accounts/payment gateways and credit card companies and you soon realise that its not the cheapy way of selling that everyone assumes it is

    The advantage of course is that you are reaching a far wider audience than you could with a physical local store and you are open 24/7 so hopefully that should be reflected in extra sales.

    As for a store front, most manufacturers have a bonkers policy of requiring a store front to qualify for a trade account (so we use ours for collections) but we still have a lot of resistance from some big name companies simply because we are web only.

  14. #58
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    Charleville is offline Nocturnal and primeval - I fish at night.
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    It is obvious that the convergence of the internet, competitive, trackable, delivery services including the US Postal Service and simple, safe payment facilities like Paypal or Visa and Mastercard have made it so much easier for the average bloke to import stuff from overseas, quite cheaply, thus bypassing sometimes absurd local pricing of the very same stuff.


    On the other hand, it also seems to have created an upsurge in home based businesses which obviously have lower costs than those having to pay rent on commercial building space.


    That may be the ultimate answer to the quandary faced by Aussie businesses trying to compete in the retail world. The old business adage still holds true, "Get big, get small or get out."


    For instance, at least three of the businesses that I have bought stuff from recently are home based, Aussie businesses. "Northwood Tools" showroom is a large room at the back of a house set amongst palm trees overlooking the family swimming pool in the residential area of Burpengary outside Brisbane (plenty of quality stock to be seen there); "The Sandpaper Man" operates out of a small room at the front of a house in a residential street in Manly West in Brisbane (also plenty of stock), and "Bob the Welder" is a home based business in West Ballina in Northern NSW.

    All of those businesses have given me excellent service and great prices. Indeed, even with the delivery of heavy welding rods, I have been able to buy cheaper from Bob-the-Welder than I can at Bunnings and with just a one day delivery time to my home in Brisbane. 'Tis more convenient for me to buy my welding rods that way than to drive over to Bunnings.


    Indeed, the service is sometimes better with these home based specialists. Last month, I was contemplating spending $475 on a new mower because I could not get the needed part for my 21 year old Rover with a Briggs and Stratton motor. However, by Googling the part number, lo and behold, "Pig Iron Parts", a home based motor parts liquidator in upstate New York, delivered a new part, in its original packaging to my home within six days at a very reasonable price. That saved me the need to spend another $450 this year on a new mower.


    So, should we feel sorry for conventional retailers who miss out on sales to us when we import products at greatly reduced prices from overseas? Absolutely not! That is how markets develop. We are seeing the emergence of a very virile worldwide trend in home based businesses to meet the challenges.


    I, for one, am all for it.


    .

  15. #59
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    The more we buy fror OS, the beter the postal system will get.

    There is a lot of product out there, but most Aussie retailers seem to think we all have to have brand names in our sheds. There is comparable (big word for me) products available for a fraction of the price, that they could import.

    I build lots of jigs for production runs. There is NO retailer in AU that provides for that. All the knobs and levers (very limited) as well as the track is double the price I can get it posted to me from OS.

    Check out the range at this site Woodworking tools, supplies, plans, accessories and more - ptreeusa.com

    Cheers Scott

  16. #60
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    Quote Originally Posted by Doc0055 View Post
    The more we buy fror OS, the beter the postal system will get.

    There is a lot of product out there, but most Aussie retailers seem to think we all have to have brand names in our sheds. There is comparable (big word for me) products available for a fraction of the price, that they could import.

    I build lots of jigs for production runs. There is NO retailer in AU that provides for that. All the knobs and levers (very limited) as well as the track is double the price I can get it posted to me from OS.

    Check out the range at this site Woodworking tools, supplies, plans, accessories and more - ptreeusa.com

    Cheers Scott
    Disagree one of the forum's newest sponsors McJings does a good range of knobs McJING Tools Online and lots of other gear at similar prices as on that site you put up.

    Disagree postal charges never get cheaper even when fuel does.

    I picked up some T-track at McJing's this week $10 the good heavy hold downs $10

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