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- Oct 22, 2014
- Messages
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Do they have US service?
Based on past comments, I do not think you will like the illumination, and I would not suggest you buy one.
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Do they have US service?
Maven’s CS is lousy. Both times I called with questions I got either outright lies, or someone speaking without proper knowledge.
This is also interesting. Fix the reticle and it could be a winner.From what I understand there are two branches to their gear lines. The higher tier stuff is Japanese manufactured and finished in Australia, the lower tier stuff is Chinese.
Good questions ... but was all covered a few pages ago.For everyone that is so concerned about who the partner is in the scope...
If the scope delivers everything you asked for and more, and meets your expectations based on Forms testing, at the price point that you're willing to invest...
Why does it matter who the partner company is?
If they never reveal who it is, are you NOT going to buy the scope?
If it's a company you don't care for... Are you Not going to buy the scope? Even after it's proven?
And it wasn't just that they dismissed the eval results, but they said something dismissive/derogatory about Rokslide/Roksliders overall. I can't now remember the exact quote - and have better things to do than go hunting for it, but perhaps someone quoted their exact words here. Pound sand indeed.Look at Maven for example, they build 1 scope that works and deny the fact that it's internals are different from their others. Dismissing the results of testing all together. They can pound sand in my book.
Oh, they were kind and prompt and I’m sure they thought they were being helpful, they just gave out factually incorrect information.Exact opposite of my experience. They have been extremely helpful in my interactions.
Covered earlier; answer is yes.I really hope this scope will be available in Canada!
It is almost certainly my ineptitude but I can’t find the pictures and specs of this scope. Can someone tell me what page?
By selling it at a reasonable margin instead of concocting an artificially high list price to fatten up two layers of distribution on the way to the consumer, then add 50% LE/mil discounts.I dunno how yall managed to pull this off for a $1k scope.
By selling it at a reasonable margin instead of concocting an artificially high list price to fatten up two layers of distribution on the way to the consumer, then add 50% LE/mil discounts.
They are scattered, wait till Dillo finds the time to post them up on a dedicated page or search this thread using his user name.It is almost certainly my ineptitude but I can’t find the pictures and specs of this scope. Can someone tell me what page?
But raw milk from a rancher (or dairy that'll sell for non-human consumption) is $6 a gallon, cuz I've sought and bought it. So a market is truly set by what a customer is willing to pay.......nothing to do with cost of production.Yup.
People would truly not believe the mfg margins on stuff.
One example is milk. From buying raw milk, processing (homogenize & pasteurize), to packaging and distributing, and paying everyone along the way, it costs about 19 cents to put a gallon of milk on the shelf.
But raw milk from a rancher (or dairy that'll sell for non-human consumption) is $6 a gallon, cuz I've sought and bought it. So a market is truly set by what a customer is willing to pay.......nothing to do with cost of production.
As long as we are joking aorund.....I'm not so sure about that...the dairy would then be locked into a fixed price contract to sell a commodity subject to variable price inputs and no market to hedge input costs beyond a relatively short time. The odds of financial distress arising from a mismatch of volatile commodity input costs and fixed price sales contracts will likely be followed by dissolution of the contract before the end of term. The only longer term, imperfect, hedge on the cost of milk production is ownership of land to grow your own feed and large dairies (I mean really large) don't have that much land.... Don't ask me how I know. LOL.I'm out of the dairy game nowadays but I bet you could get that down a little from $6/gallon if you signed an agreement to buy 250,000,000 gallons over 10 years![]()