ben_r_ said:
Be sure to check out banggood folks, many of the Woodpeckers designs have been copied, are surprisingly good quality and can be had for a small fraction of the cost Woodpeckers asks for them! Regardless of how some may feel about it, those options are here to stay.
I have always had problems with knock-off tools or repair parts.
First, they always seem to be "so close" but just not right. Just a little more time/attention to detail and they could be far better. I always assume that this is because they are just copying an existing thing and don't have the engineering and user experience to know how the thing is actually used. They don't know what is important or why.
Second, and clearly related. They can make these things so much cheaper for at least partly that same reason. They certainly have some engineering/design time in it, but only in the realm of reproducing it. It is far easier to copy than to innovate. There is no "risk" in copying a successful product. That research/design time up-front costs and that has to be recovered before the product is profitable. The sales volume affects this too, so there is some research time involved there. Pricing has to be in-line with that goal. They have to sell it for enough to recover these costs, in addition to the materials, labor, etc. Lower total volume of sales (as projected) has to result in higher prices.
So the knock-off products that get sold "instead" of the genuine ones cut into that sales figure.
This means they have to sell the product at a lesser profit and hold that out for a longer time to recover or drop the product entirely. ie "cut their losses"
I can only imagine that manufacturers like WP are aware of this. They know it going in, that someone who has no accountability to patent protections is going to copy their products. So they have to increase the profit margin and therefore selling price to make up for the decrease in sales.
It becomes a vicious cycle. The prices are higher because of the actual costs involved in the process of design, engineering, prototyping, manufacturing, marketing, etc plus making up for the lesser volume of sales that come from knock-offs. That makes the gap between their price and the copy even greater. Sales of the copies go up because of that and the cycle continues.
Yes, way too much thought went into that.
I ran into this recently with a Festool product.
The "Power Tec" screw clamps for the MFT are a good example. They look similar and they do work (mostly), but there are quality differences. First, the bend of the hook that goes into the table is not nearly as sharp, so the vertical column is forced against the side of the hole, rather than floating wherever you place it as you tighten it up. Second, there is some misalignment somewhere in the sliding arm. It is either broached slightly off or the threads are drilled/tapped slightly off. They do not tighten squarely to the table. This may or may not matter in some cases or to some people. Even tough I think the handles of the genuine Festool ones are too small, I still much prefer them and will not buy any more of the others. And these don't have anywhere near the price difference of the WP vs others.