Bojam
Established Member
Would anyone be willing to pay a premium for a machine/tool on the basis that it carried a "Made in Britain" label I wonder?
I don't really care where its made as long as its made well.
I think we should bring more manufacturing back to the UK, it would be good for the economy and employment and reduce our reliance on China.
I would be prepared to pay a little extra for something made here but only if its good quality. Not if its British Leyland quality...
Ollie
I see Axminster Tools are also a member
pretty sure you can - and it seems logical...Interesting. I believe that all the UJK stuff is manufactured in the UK (correct me if I'm wrong). But their machinery is mostly/all from the Far East. So can they apply this label to just a subset of their branded products?
pretty sure you can - and it seems logical...
if you had to make everything in the UK then no-one would find it easy to be a member other than the various home-working craft companies who sell on facebook and etsy! as long as a specific item is made in the UK, then why not share that... presumably though product A being made in the UK doesn't allow you to claim the same for all your other products!
So extractors and turning tools only,* everything else still likely to be made in China.across our range of turning tools and CamVac dust extractors.
All the people with a manufacturing background are busy manufacturing on a Thursday afternoon!Thought this would be a "hot topic". No one interested?
All the people with a manufacturing background are busy manufacturing on a Thursday afternoon!
Would anyone be willing to pay a premium for a machine/tool on the basis that it carried a "Made in Britain" label I wonder?
Totally agree. Just wondering how feasible this is in the context of today's global economy. I mean, there's a reason why British manufacturing declined and so much production became centred in the East. Are things starting to change (and, if so, why)?
That’s probably more than they expect. Assembling from finished components is usually enough to qualify for this type of scheme. With your definition it would exclude just about all electronic and electrical products.@Bojam Doubt it as the parts would just be bolted/welded/soldered to a sub-assembly and put out as a finished product. The actual part has not been changed. A T shaped cast iron casting delivered and then machined to have dado mounts etc to be put on the assembly would qualify as size and shape would be different. Same as log arrives, gets split, you buy turn into a credenza. Tada made in Britain.
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