DeformedTree
Member
- Joined
- May 19, 2018
- Messages
- 1,397
like others, I would just say just make them all holy rails. But if someone has no plans for every doing LR32, the holes may just be annoying to them (crud catchers). Clearly there is a cost, you have to run it thru one more machine, and there may also be a scrap rate with that. When they sell them for the same price as heathen rails, either Festool is loosing money, or accounting wise the heathen rails are subsidizing the holy rails to some level.
Time could also be a factor. It takes some time to make those hole. Doing some rails, it is some time, but doing all of them would add a lot of time to manufacturing of product, and probably mean adding more machinery to offset this. The extruding and cutting to length would be quick, but any machine doing those holes is going to take time, probably much more than anything else in making the rails. Would just lead to a manufacturing constraint in getting rails out the door. Having a low percentage of rails being holy, where people making them just have to toss a rail in the puncher while they do their other task, not so bad, but soon as it's all the rails, then it would be a bottle neck.
Festool selling them for the same price just hides what would be obvious that they clearly don't cost the same to make.
Time could also be a factor. It takes some time to make those hole. Doing some rails, it is some time, but doing all of them would add a lot of time to manufacturing of product, and probably mean adding more machinery to offset this. The extruding and cutting to length would be quick, but any machine doing those holes is going to take time, probably much more than anything else in making the rails. Would just lead to a manufacturing constraint in getting rails out the door. Having a low percentage of rails being holy, where people making them just have to toss a rail in the puncher while they do their other task, not so bad, but soon as it's all the rails, then it would be a bottle neck.
Festool selling them for the same price just hides what would be obvious that they clearly don't cost the same to make.