Cheese said:
Besides, Woodpeckers stocks spares for previously produced tools. I’ve ordered a bunch of spares that were delivered within 10 days…so luxuriate in the knowledge that what you need is what they stock. [smile]
They stock spares for tools that they no longer produce? Now that, sounds counter to the idea that these tools were not popular enough to be profitable in the first place?
Also "spare parts" or repair parts are not the entire tool. If it is stolen, or destroyed by some other means, you are still stuck. And if they did, by some insanity, have all of the parts to create the entire tool, why not sell it as the entire tool?
Or if they could/would make these parts on an "as needed" basis for the original purchaser? That has created the exclusivity thing that I mentioned before by calling it a cult. If you have to "follow" a tool company so closely that you see these initial offerings from the very beginning like it's some kind of Kickstarter program? So only those who pre-paid some arbitrary "cost" get the privilege of owning one?
Ah, no.
As far as the ide of a back-up, it just depends. I don't really mean a direct duplicate, but more of another way to do the same thing, until the original can be repaired or replaced.
For example, If something were to happen to my MFK700, that I use exclusively for trimming hardwood edging, I have an alternative. I purchased all of the angle stop and chip deflector parts of the OF1010, which will do the same thing. I have only ever needed to set it up like that once and that was because I needed more width of cut than the MFK700 could reach, but the ability is there.
Again, this is because I do this for a living, I can't just set things off to the side until I canget the original fixed/replaced, like a hobbyist can.
So, my original point, if this was the case with some very unique OTT, for which there really is no alternative? Even if I could put a project off until I could get the new one, if no new one is available, then what?
I realize that I may be over-dramatizing this, but having a devastating loss can change ones perspective.