Hi Roger - yes, I fully expected that... I think in a production shop with space the speed and closer finish are benefits. But we're talking a 300mm machine minimum, with loads of space round it, and side and out tables... that's a massive footprint. And it's probably a 5hp machine. The equivalent bandsaw would be a resaw, really (2" blade, 5hp, power feed etc).
My view is not the majority one, but a good big bandsaw is a very efficient ripper: far smaller kerf so less energy input, less dust, less stock waste etc.
Well set-up, finish can be quite good, no match for table saw - but neither produce a finish anyway so there will be a next stage (planer etc).. And bandsaws take up a fraction of the space, work against a wall.
I think it is a fair observation that in volume ripping the mills always use bandsaws (big ones admittedly). If you were designing a machine to rip stock, the intuitively smart design would be the bandsaw... a powered evolution of the 2-man pit saw.
But I will be out-voted of course.