Eugene Lehnert
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 5, 2007
- Messages
- 142
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 0
Made in the USA
Made in the USA
I would love to see Epic %100 made in the USA.
Made in the USA
I would love to see Epic %100 made in the USA.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
... I'm happier still that RED gets their ideas and feedback from Redusers, Earth.
I bought the Red One not knowing where it was made. And I would still be buying the Epic if it were made in some other place. But because I live at certain co-ordinates on a map that are within the boundaries of a county within a state that are also within the boundaries of a country... the United States, I feel a common bond with the people encased with me in these boundaries within boundaries. Thus, I am glad that my fellow occupants are reaping the financial benefits that Made In The USA imparts to the rest of us.
Yet on this forum, I also feel a common bond with Redusers forged by all things Red... Epic M, Epic X, Scarlet, Red Ray, and any other product branded with the Red Dot. Sure, sometimes we get a little snippy with one another, but when criticized or attacked unjustly, we pretty much have each other's back. And when reading one another's posts, I personally find that it is someone from a different country than the one I'm from that says something that corresponds to my viewpoint.
What I'm saying is, while I'm glad RED does its manufacturing in California, America, I'm happier still that RED gets their ideas and feedback from Redusers, Earth.
The future of our economy depends on Americans being productive. That means actually making things...
Finally, someone said it.
What RED is doing is the key for economic recovery. The jobs that they are creating don't just re-distribute new wealth, but actually creates it. This is the key to growth and recovery. Now if more leaders of industry and government would realize this...
Bruce Johnson
I bought the Red One not knowing where it was made. And I would still be buying the Epic if it were made in some other place. But because I live at certain co-ordinates on a map that are within the boundaries of a county within a state that are also within the boundaries of a country... the United States, I feel a common bond with the people encased with me in these boundaries within boundaries. Thus, I am glad that my fellow occupants are reaping the financial benefits that Made In The USA imparts to the rest of us.
Yet on this forum, I also feel a common bond with Redusers forged by all things Red... Epic M, Epic X, Scarlet, Red Ray, and any other product branded with the Red Dot. Sure, sometimes we get a little snippy with one another, but when criticized or attacked unjustly, we pretty much have each other's back. And when reading one another's posts, I personally find that it is someone from a different country than the one I'm from that says something that corresponds to my viewpoint.
What I'm saying is, while I'm glad RED does its manufacturing in California, America, I'm happier still that RED gets their ideas and feedback from Redusers, Earth.
Am just concerned that RED could have ensured more value to the American economy by not restricting its manufacturing to CA/USA.
Many companies say that their products "are designed in the USA." That is a hand job. Designing in the USA does create a few jobs, but that isn't enough. Most then send the designs to China for manufacturing.
Truly "Made in the USA" is what matters. That used to mean something. It does again today. At least we think so...
We are anxious and excited to create jobs here. We think we can compete by designing, engineering and manufacturing in the USA. That means performance and pricing.
90+% of EPIC is USA made. Even the boards are made in Silicone Valley. All assembly is being done at our factory in Irvine, CA. While we have nothing against China, almost nothing about EPIC has any parts made there. Only a handful of parts are made in Japan.
The future of our economy depends on Americans being productive. That means actually making things...
The very 1st EPIC-M (which went to Spiderman) took 8 people 12 hours to assemble. The 1st run had a 10% rate for "no re-work". That means that 90% had some sort of necessary re-work before it could be sent out.
Today... an EPIC-X gets assembled by an 8 person team in 13 minutes with a 96% "no re-work" percentage. And we are just getting started.
These are exciting times in a number of ways. The single best camera in the cinema industry was conceived of, designed, engineered, developed, and manufactured in the USA. Not Japan. Not Germany. Who would have thunk it?
Jim
I think that is the wrong reason to do it. I don't see a problem with cheap alternatives and ripoffs. They will never truly affect your business, as long as you keep
This country is for dreamers and inventors who can make it happen ,Kristin your words appear on my screen here in California by INTERNET( formerly Arpanet).
There is nothing political about it ....These are the Facts...
The first ARPANET link was established between the University of California, Los Angeles and the Stanford Research Institute on 22:30 hours on October 29, 1969.