made in the UK
 

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[Closed] made in the UK

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can it still carry any kudos?


 
Posted : 15/08/2011 10:07 pm
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Did it ever (outside of the UK)?


 
Posted : 15/08/2011 10:08 pm
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Sure, for certain products: F1 cars, whisky, some cheeses... British design is still well-regarded, both industrial and fashion.


 
Posted : 15/08/2011 10:09 pm
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"made in" doesn't really mean what people think it does.


 
Posted : 15/08/2011 10:15 pm
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I reckon that it still can. Look at HOPE, a shining example of mountain bike design & function, all made here. Obviously others will disagree though.


 
Posted : 15/08/2011 10:19 pm
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I reckon that it still can. Look at HOPE, a shining example of mountain bike design & function, all made here. Obviously others will disagree though.

That's a single company, not a country-as-a-brand. There are plenty of UK companies that are well-respected, I understood the OP's question to refer to the value or otherwise of sticking a Union Jack on the tin when trying to sell something.


 
Posted : 15/08/2011 10:23 pm
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Hope=Hopeless


 
Posted : 15/08/2011 10:23 pm
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It should. At the very least it means that what you've just purchased may well have kept someone in the UK in employment.


 
Posted : 15/08/2011 10:37 pm
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+1 to MuppetWrangler.

If only more felt this way... 🙄


 
Posted : 15/08/2011 10:42 pm
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Yes but then it will fall apart 😆


 
Posted : 15/08/2011 10:49 pm
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another +1 muppetwrangler.
Especially manufacturing jobs where people can feel proud of what they produce and that their job has some worth


 
Posted : 15/08/2011 10:52 pm
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I think we're at the point now where people look at anything stamped with "Made In Britain"with a kind of "why wasn't this made in Taiwan/China/Indonesia?" kind of vibe, other than high-end automobiles and aircraft parts


 
Posted : 15/08/2011 11:02 pm
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Hope=Hopeless

Can you elaborate? hope are my go to manufacturer, personally love their stuff and never had any issues yet. I "hope" this continues but if not I will rely on their quality customer service.

I do try to buy British first if I can but its not essential.


 
Posted : 15/08/2011 11:48 pm
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+1 to ferrit32. I love Hope stuff & I always try to buy from home.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 12:06 am
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I'll buy british made if there is a choice, and whilst in NZ i will try and buy NZ made.

However not at the expence of quality, but nowadays the stuff made outside the far east tends to be the higher end anyway, the other stuff went overseas long ago


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 12:52 am
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The rest of the world values the finest things in British manufacturing more than Britain does, thats why they own a large chunk of British manufacturing.

Reid and Taylor in Langholm make some of the best cloth / fabrics for some of the finest suits (British, Italian etc) in the world.
http://www.reidandtaylor.co.uk/
They just happen to be Indian owned.

Kyowa Hakko Kirin of Japan has bought ProStrakan of Galashiels.
http://www.in-pharmatechnologist.com/Industry-Drivers/Kyowa-inks-buyout-deal-for-ProStrakan

Lochcarron of Scotland (Selkirk) plus Peter Scott of Hawick were bought by a South Korean company.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-south-scotland-14011889

Ballantyne of Innerleithen (Cashmere) Italian owned.
http://www.ballantyne.it/

(At one time Innerleithen had the highest exports earnings per head of population of anywhere in Scotland.)

Tomatin was the first Scotch whisky distillery to be wholly owned by a Japanese company.

Scottish Power, a fine Spanish company.
British Energy, a proud French company.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 4:56 am
 aP
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The short termism of the city and the general preference of both politicians and the general populace to work in financial and services industries means that no UK owned manufacturing business really has any hope of continuing. However, as said above other countries value them, so now they're foreign owned.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 6:11 am
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means that no UK owned manufacturing business really has any hope of continuing. However, as said above other countries value them, so now they're foreign owned.

The one I work for is growing at 10% a year 😆 Still you must be right, we have no hope. I'll just stay at home then, sweet 🙂


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 6:17 am
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It certainly does and the myth that Britain no longer manufacrues anyting is just that - a myth. Our manufacturing output is bigger than France for example and we produce some amazing products made by nice common British people who I am sure are very proud making their airbus wings and f1 cars.

Britain also has produced some absolute crap and some of these companies have gone bust. That's life and happens in India, China and Taiwan.

Some companies are bought buy foreign interests, companies, investors and guess what, some of these close but most keep going and employ lots of these cheery people happily making their stuff who still get paid and most of the money stays in the country. At the end of the day we live in a global market and want it our way when it suits us but moan when some jobs are lost. Strangely I don't see too much sorrow at the thousands of jobs HSBC will be shedding this year....

I will never just buy British just for the sake of it if there is something better out there. I guess that's why I have Shimano brakes and Hope hubs!


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 7:26 am
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Don't forget all the long term inward investment to utilise UK skills and workmanship

Just around here, off he top of my head

Nissan cars
Komatsu heavy plant
NSK bearings
Cummins Engines

All of them major, long term UK manufacturers


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 7:44 am
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I've had 4 Honda cars in the last 15 years; all made in Swindon.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 8:00 am
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druidh - Member
Did it ever (outside of the UK)?

IME, yes, actually though it depends to some extent on the product.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 8:08 am
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Hope=Hopeless

Come on Pumpupanddown! Is that it? We all have poor Experiences when purchasing any product, but this is a British company with massive enthusiasm for both engineering and cycling.

Whilst we are on an MTB forum, what about Orange?
I had a conversation with my father in law, who own a Giant Anthem X1 and never rides it off road. He stated that the Giant has to be far superior to the Orange as they (Giant) have millions to invest, so how could Orange possibly compete or build a product which even comes close? My experience of throwing my Orange down the hills of Calderdale on a bi-weekly basis says different. Sad thing is he’s an apprentice trained British engineer. Seems like the age old problem that any British success story gets bashed by the British?


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 8:13 am
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'Made in the UK'...by a Polish worker...for a foreign owned company.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 8:25 am
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can it still carry any kudos?

good enough for airbus to have wings made here - though airbus are also starting to make in china.. but then that is where the market is expanding

I've had 4 Honda cars in the last 15 years; all made in Swindon.

you would of thought if they made them properly, [i]one[/i] would have lasted for 15 years 😉 😉

as a serious note we do actually make quite a lot... just that financial services and service industry always grabs the headlines


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 8:35 am
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'Made in the UK'...by a Polish worker...for a foreign owned company.

Nothing like a random comment to get me interested. Which company is this then?


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 8:35 am
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the other thing now is that most countries can make things... it is the design that is the important thing.. look at Dyson.. makes stuff overseas, but will soon be up to 700 designers/engineers in wiltshire at their design centre..


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 8:38 am
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I don't think 'Made in UK' carries much kudos in itself, but there are plenty of products that are made in UK that do.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 8:41 am
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Orange Five
best bike in the world .. nuff said.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 9:00 am
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According to a recent documentary "made in Britain".

The UK used to export high volume, low value, easy to copy products. I.e mass production.

These days we export low volume, high value, specialist hard to copy products. I.e batch production.

The examples given (that I can remember), F1 cars, euro fighter, Bromton bicycles.

Interesting that Bromtons are highly sought after in China and according to their own MD. "If we made our bikes in China the Chinese wouldn't want them."

In the same doc it stated the UK manufacturing has always been larger than the financial sector.

BBC, must be true.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 9:16 am
 aP
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Airbus wings won't be made in the UK for much longer as BAe sold off the division to EADS who won't retain that investment in a non core-stakeholder country for much longer.
As I said above - British owned manufacturing is effectively hamstrung by institutional disinterest and the short termism of the City.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 9:17 am
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I don't think the UK government does enough to promote British Made with any kind of a single voice (or any money).

Look at NZ as a comparison. They have all sorts of official marks to put on anything that is NZ Made. They are also very proud of things like NZ Owned, NZ Grown, etc.

It seems a part of their DNA over there to appreciate their own time and effort and have a real sense of pride, yet it happens without any of that negative vibe that the BNP have given some of our emblems over here.

I think there is a great opportunity to do the same here.

Yes, we have a great reputation (along with Scandanavia) for design and (along with Germany) for engineering, and those things are actively promoted overseas, but I'm not sure they are promoted well enough over here for us all to feel that same sense of appreciation.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 9:22 am
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I cleared my grandparents' house last year. A lot of the stuff was stamped "Made in England" or even "Made in Sheffield". Other stuff was simply marked "Foreign".


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 9:22 am
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you would of thought if they made them properly, one would have lasted for 15 years

Ah well, the first Honda, a 1.4 petrol civic, ran for 10 years and 197k miles before the gear box failed.

The second one, a 1.8 petrol Accord, is 9 years old and is now my GF's car.

The third one, a 2.0 petrol civic, I crashed 😳

The fourth one, another 2.0 petrol civic, is my current car

Doffs cap to the automotive workers of Swindon 😀


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 9:28 am
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I'd love to be patriotic in my purchasing, but when viewed objectively UK manufactured goods are so often worse than their rivals. Not in concept, but in delivery.

We're still good at design, but I just get a sense that manufacturing is over in this country. [i]Made in the UK[/i] to me unfortunately all too often means [i]"made badly"[/i].

In much the same way a nation's mindset is betrayed by its railway network, I think automotive industries, where they exist, probably reflect quite accurately the quality of manufacturing in a country.

The Land Rover Defender really is, despite what many ill informed people claim, the best off road car on the domestic market by some margin. Unfortunately it's screwed together in a way that completely undermines the concept. All the approach angles in the world won't help a car perform off road if it's always at the dealer being fixed. Some of the details on the things actually make me wince.

That said, Bloor has done well with Triumph since taking the helm, with manufacture taking place exclusively over here until recently I gather, and JCB still seem to be at the top of their game don't they?

I can't really count foreign owned companies here, I must point out. I know we churn out Toyotas and Nissans with great aplomb, but they're Japanese really aren't they, lets be honest. And I'm not really saying we don't still have pockets of excellence. Rolls Royce Aero is still a force to be reckoned with for instance, but I think they are perhaps the exceptions that prove the rule.

I really don't mind spending more to buy locally either - in fact I do every day - but I can't really accept substandard products where there is no need for them to be substandard.

We don't have the obsessive if rather soulless attention to detail of the Germans, nor the flair for beauty at the cost of substance of the Italians, despite them both being our close neighbours. Instead I think we have that "men in sheds" thing, that bodge thing. That "make do" thing. Our nation is built on bodged foundations.

We've always had that passion and flair for innovation, and that's where I think our skills lie. We come up with good concepts, but we then need the Germans or Japanese to come and build it for us otherwise it'll never work.

More often these days, in the world of bikes, I find myself being drawn towards the [i]"Designed in and for the UK, built by people who know what they're doing in Taiwan"[/i] stuff.

Having said that about our talent for design and innovation, I think this too is slowly starting to get left behind. Design education in this country is suffering, and pretty soon I think we'll struggle to be thought of in much esteem.

In general I think we're now too focussed on the past. We're resting on our laurels. We spend too much time trying to reclaim what we perceive as our glory days, when really we need to be identifying what we need right now, in order to plan for a future we'll soon be in.

There are countless people out there trying to do just that, but they struggle to be heard in a country full of people banging on about Spitfires and Routemasters and steam trains.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 9:32 am
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Orange Five
best Frame in the world .. nuff said

FTFY
it isnt a bike until you have added all the parts that make it rideable and I doubt that you will be able to find all the components you need that are british made.

There are things we do well and there are things other countries do well and being patriotic about british manufacturing is one thing but when it comes down to quality you have to sometimes go elsewhere!


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 9:37 am
 JAG
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Don't forget all us hardworking chaps at Jaguar LandRover 8)

Admittedly foreign owned but innovative, stylish and highly succesful. The Prime Minister was here a couple of weeks ago and we get plenty of support in the press.

Cars sell very well overseas because of the 'Made and designed in Great Britain' badge.

Jackthedog: what a load of old rubbish!

You mention the only vehicle Jaguar LandRover make with a 60 year heritage and 60 year old design. ALL of our other cars are World Beaters - no two ways about it!

FreeLander
Discovery
Range Rover (Evoque, Sport etc...)
Jaguar XF
Jaguar XJ
Jaguar XK

All world class cars and highly desirable because of who we are and where we are located 8)


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 9:42 am
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highclimber I applaud your complete and utter pedantism............


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 9:47 am
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Pedantry, you mean? 😉


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 9:50 am
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It's more expensive to build in the UK, therefore to build at the same price, the quality is compromised.

The difference needs to be that WE (as British consumers) appreciate why it costs more and what benefits that provides.

Currently I don't thing people are educated enough by the government and British manufacturing industry about those things.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 9:53 am
 JAG
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It's more expensive to build in the UK

To some extent but only on high volume cheap stuff. If you're making something for which there is high demand (usually because it's innovative or stylish or high tech or all three) then we can hold our own because not many places can achieve these things and those that can have a similar 'cost-of-living' effect as the UK.

Places like India, Eastern Europe and China have taken over as high volume and low-cost locations.

The rest we make here in abundance.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 10:09 am
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Jackthedog: what a load of old rubbish!

You mention the only vehicle Jaguar LandRover make with a 60 year heritage and 60 year old design. ALL of our other cars are World Beaters - no two ways about it!

You have a point there, perhaps I didn't make mine as eloquently as I would have liked.

What I was trying to say with the Defender is that it's the icon of the bunch, a most wonderful concept and a stalwart of British motoring. Yet is has been blighted throughout it's entire existence by being badly made.

I don't want that to detract from what's happening with Jaguar Land Rover today, an enterprise I overlooked. I've no idea what part Indian ownership plays in its current success, nor do I mind. Great cars, the lot of them.

I'm glad to see that people such as yourself have such obvious pride in what you do.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 10:13 am
 JAG
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I'd have to agree about Defender and it's quality image.

We've addressed what we can but some stuff can't be overcome because it's locked in to the original design. We have to maintain some of the original design elements for the Service and Aftermarket boys.

But it's still a great car and world renowned for the things you say - even the quality image: which some generous souls describe as ease of maintenance 😆


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 10:34 am
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Glad you raised JLR, they're a good example of a brighter outlook than the one I held.

I'd be interested to know what changed in the time between, say the P38 and L322 Rangies that made it such a step forward? Would you say it was the German influence at that time, or was that coincidental?

And again, with the recent leap we've seen from Jaguar, what pushed that? There seems to have been big shifts in culture at both outfits over the past decade. Jag in recent years especially has completely reinvented itself, after quite some time of laurel resting. What changed?


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 10:46 am
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Did it ever (outside of the UK)?

Yes it did actually. It's one of the reasons why this nation became so wealthy....

As for Hope: IME, their stuff is better made, better finished and better designed than most other stuff out there, and very reasonably priced to. Excellent value for money. A Hope headset I recently bought is of superior quality to all others I've bought, my Mini brakes are 8 years old and still working perfectly, my XC hubs are also 8 years old and working perfectly (original bearings too!), I have a Fatso hub that is 15 years old now I think, still buttery smooth on original bearings, and a couple of other Hope hubs still going strong. In Hope's case, 'Made in England' still signifies a guarantee of quality. Sadly this is increasingly not the case with lots of other things. 🙁

We still do lots of things very well though, and certainly could be competitive on a global scale. It's just that as our demands for higher living standards have risen, our conscientiousness and work ethic has decreased, and we are now too greedy, complacent and apathetic for this to happen.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 11:01 am
 mrmo
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There should be a value to made in britain. But things like british leyland didn't do anything for the brand in the uk.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 11:08 am
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Should we include "soft products" like music and film?


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 11:17 am
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"but they're Japanese really aren't they"

A fair point. AFAIK, the engine design is very Japanese. The body shells are often of European design. BUT, the all important assembly is by British hands, but using Japanese production management techniques.

I think the Jap (and German) management really understand that the cost of quality is the cost of non-conformance: they spend money to save money. While much of British management culture is concerned with wringing out profit by penny pinching, and quality suffers.

It's just a thought.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 11:29 am
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they're Japanese really

A fair point. AFAIK, the engine design is very Japanese. The body shells are often of European design. BUT, the all important assembly is by British hands, but using Japanese production management techniques.

I think the Jap (and German) management really understand that the cost of quality is the cost of non-conformance: they spend money to save money. While much of British management culture is concerned with wringing out profit by penny pinching, and quality suffers.

It's just a thought.

Agreed, I think.

It doesn't really matter where the factory is, or what language the chaps on the factory floor speak. It's in culture, ethos and methodology where nationality comes through.

At the end of the day, a British professional has the same amount of fingers, toes, eyes and capacity for intelligence as any other - it just comes down to culture. So while Nissans might be built by SAFC supporting Mackems, they're very much Japanese cars.

Just as Cotic bikes are very British products of a very British company, despite being made in the Far East.

Should we include "soft products" like music and film?

Interesting question.

I used to work in software development for an internationally renowned British company. Digital media is supposedly an industry we're at the top of. But it was still run, at every level, with a culture of bodging and making do. The focus was always on the covering of daily inadequacies rather than on any long term sustainability.

Thankfully such an approach to "manufacture" can be masked when the end result isn't a physical entity, so it continues without the consumer really knowing.

I'm not saying my experience is to be taken as a typical industry-wide example. Though the well documented issues with chronic staff overtime and unsustainable stress levels that remain a key component of the industry suggest that it exists on a knife edge. I can't help but feel that if the industry doesn't start behaving a bit less... [i]British[/i] it runs the very real risk of being closed down once India and China have finally learnt everything they can from the outsourcing they've been taking on and decide to get in on the act themselves.

Perhaps it could well be quite telling that the UK currently does well in an industry where innovation can shine and dodgy production can be masked.

And that much of the surviving and thriving 'traditional' manufacture in the UK is under foreign management.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 11:58 am
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The Aussies are fanatical about products that a made in Aus, it seems to work as well, if you see the logo with 'proudly made in Australia', it makes me think that my $ are keeping someone busy and the country ticking along. [url= http://www.australianmade.com.au/consumer-site/ ]Aussie Made[/url]

I'm not fanatical about buying local but its nice to know you have the choice and its easy to spot what's been made in Austrlia


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 12:00 pm
 JAG
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LandRover: I believe (and I've only been here a year) the main change was German (BMW) and US (Ford) management philosophy. Particularly the Project Management styles which allowed a better car to be delivered at lower cost/improved margins etc... and presumably taught a few people some new tricks.

Jaguar: I believe (and I've only been here a year) that leaving the Ford group and not having direct competition from other members of the Ford Premiere Auto' Group has allowed new Jag's to be more stylish and more sporting without clashing with other manufacturers in the PAG.

Just my tuppence - of course 🙂


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 12:01 pm
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easygroove - Member
The Aussies are fanatical about products that a made in Aus, it seems to work as well, if you see the logo with 'proudly made in Australia'
Same in Canada.

Orange Bikes are a good example for this thread. They sell reasonably well in the UK, but have almost no presence anywhere else. Now - it could be argued that they are built for some sort UK-specific riding or conditions, but I'm not really believing that the UK can be so unique. So, isn't it the case that many folk but them because they are seen to be a UK brand (despite the percentage of UK manufacture being quite low)?


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 12:04 pm
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Just as Cotic bikes are very British products of a very British company, despite being made in the Far East.

But are they less British or the same than say an Orange 5 or any of the other Orange monocoque designs, that are designed and built in Halifax?

I am not knocking Cotic or Singular or any other UK based comapny that designs here for here but outsources manufacture abroad. But surely if something is actually fettled here as well as being designed here that is even better ie Hope and Orange


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 12:08 pm
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Should we include "soft products" like music and film?

Nope, I don't think we should, the sheer quantity of toss we (as a nation) produce in these Spheres far outweights the odd Diamond that turns up...

As for proper tangible products, I think the problem as already stated is consistent delivery of high quality, in significant quantity and at sensible prices, We can definately do it in the UK seemingly so long as we are managed by Japanese, German or Indian Parent companies...

I agree about the "Men in Sheds" point made a few posts back, we are still a good R&D nation but here again our ability to develop and realise products often falls down...

As a counterpoint though is it worth considering the idea that "Made in the Britain" or indeed "Made in" any other part of the world could well become an irrelavance over the coming decades?
In a "Globalised" world where communication and commerce are increasingly "Borderless" the point of origin for any product is enevitably less important thean the cost, function, qualitys and aesthetic appeal of it, I think perhaps as a manufacturing/producing nation we need to think about how we will fit into a world where a little Union flag stamp means far less to a consumer than a positive Which? review...

The truth is that blathering on about "Iconic British products" is hardly looking to the future, if we can't get beyond High value low Volume production we're knackered because the Far East and Asia have learned all our old tricks very quickly... as somebody else already said we can't rest on our laurels or live on past glories, we ain't making Spitfires anymore...


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 12:09 pm
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Not manufacturing per se, but we were world class in pharmaceuticals - many important medicines discovered here over the years. The modern era of drug discovery in fact began at Harlow with the ulcer drug tagamet in the 70s.
Sadly in the process of going down the tubes over the last 5 years, for various reasons, at least at the level of big pharma.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 12:20 pm
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Both my bikes are Orange mountain bikes
(plus the one I sold last year).
Whenever I buy bike treats , they generally come from hope.
I work in engineering and too many of our jobs/skills& support roles are vanishing.
I also know some of the frames/parts are imported ,
but the way i see it , it's turnover for a British company.
I'm not naive or stupid enough to blindly buy British ,but If I can get what I need from this country then I do. And feel happier for it.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 12:26 pm
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For me the "Made in Britain" tag has less to do with some level of perceived superior quality and more to do with keeping British people in jobs and the sustainability of the product.

I will happily pay a little more if I now it’s not being manufactured and shipped half way around the world just to satisfy my consumerist appetite for cheaper but no less quality goods. If there is a product made down the road that does the job as well, if not better, than something from the Far East even if there is a premium attached that’s my number one propriety.

After that if it’s designed here and then made elsewhere and shipped in at least there is a benefit of jobs being created/kept in the UK in the design element.

Then finally if I cannot find something of the right quality or the price makes the item uneconomical even allowing for a "British" premium then I will go that route.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 12:30 pm
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So, isn't it the case that many folk but them because they are seen to be a UK brand

Personally I like Orange Fives because they're designed by people who understand what it is to spend three quarters of the riding year ploughing through Peak District gritty slop. There is attention to detail where it matters. Mud clearance, few pivots, easy to service, simple, clean lines with no mud traps, internal full outer cable routing; details often overlooked by those bike designers for whom a trail is a sun baked, dusty Californian hillside.

I don't like the Five [i]because[/i] it's welded together in the North of England - I like it because it's [i]designed to be ridden[/i] in the North of England, where I live. If I moved to Cali perhaps I'd prefer a Yeti?

Just as Cotic bikes are very British products of a very British company, despite being made in the Far East.

But are they less British or the same than say an Orange 5 or any of the other Orange monocoque designs, that are designed and built in Halifax? [...] But surely if something is actually fettled here as well as being designed here that is even better ie Hope and Orange

Yes, I suppose a Cotic is "less British" than a (Halifax made) Orange Five when compared side by side in a "British Off".

I think it's the "better" that's difficult to quantify. Often I've found British goods to be of poorer quality than equivalent German or Japanese goods. So I have to decide what my priorities are. I do know I really struggle to have patience with poor quality products - few things annoy me more than something not fit for purpose.

If better means a superior product, then fine. If it means supporting a UK workforce, fine. If it means less air miles etc then again, fine. If it means affordable, fine. Whatever you're looking for. I suppose as long as better isn't being used simply as a substitute for "not foreign", it's up to us all to decide.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 12:36 pm
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I love my UK built Pashley! It's the only one I've ever seen here in Canada. It gets more looks and comments than anything I've owned before, including a flash sports car. 🙂

Sure it cost a bit more than a chinese made Electra, but I'll own it for decades.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 12:40 pm
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I wholeheartedly agree with Senor J. I've got an Orange 5 liberally sprinkled with Hope stuff, partly because it's British, but mainly because I think they're among the best available (in the case of Hope, THE best). I've also got a Triumph Speed Triple (in orange!)which is as well built as any Japanese, German or Italian bike (maybe excepting Honda)and better priced than nearly everything comparible. I've been in manufacturing for 40 years and worked for British, Japanese, Dutch and US companies and I wish we valued our manufacturers as much as other companies do. In Holland for instance, a good shop floor engineer is quite happy to stay on the shop floor, not aspiring to be a manager as we are encouraged to do here at the first opportunity. This is beacuse he is well paid, valued and doesn't feel part of the 'Us and them' divide that is promoted here between office staff and 'workers'.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 12:41 pm
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Triumph is a real success story. instead of chasing top speed and horsepower figures they build bikes that ride well in the real world. They are small enough to react to customer feedback and are bucking the general trend in growing sales of big bikes in a shrinking market.

Most other nations wouldn't even be having this discussion, US companies market very heavily on patriotism (only relatively recently has this failed in the auto market due to such poor quality inefficient products) and others have mentioned NZ, Canada, Germany etc


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 12:56 pm
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it just comes down to culture. So while Nissans might be built by SAFC supporting Mackems, they're very much Japanese cars

Although AFAIK they really got the ideas from Deming, who was an American (Out of the Crisis). But I think the concepts resonated with their Shinto culture. Chipps reported on very interesting tour of Shimano a some editions ago where the designer talked about the designs evolving toward perfection, like rocks are worn smooth in the stream.

I too work in bespoke software development and am faced the ongoing problem that no-one is interested in spending money on making the software stronger, better tested and more maintainable. Management will only fund work paid for by customers. And customers only want to pay for features.

Over time, the conceptual integrity of the software is lost as patches and features are added. It becomes unusable as a platform for further development. The entire asset, many man-years of effort and worth a few million pounds, becomes worthless. [paraphrasing Fred Brooks, who is the software equivalent of Deming]

I'm convinced the entire problem is nothing to do with software specifically, and everything to do with poorly trained management.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 1:04 pm
 mt
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Great debate folks and very interesting views. We are a uk based manufacturing company, we direct export around the world as well as selling many products that leave these shores on other equipment. There are many companies like us in the UK servicing all sorts of sectors. These companies make products to be proud off that some would say are traditional engineering other very high tech but often very nich or specialist, they are used in some of the most sofisticated or dangerous production processes in the world. Making things is something to take pride in.

Cannot hide from the fact that many production jobs have been "offshored" but things will change and manufacturering be back here, it may not be the manufacturing we presently understand but it will be back. 3d printing anyone? take a look at that and let your imagination go.

Given that many companies are not british owned I prefer when possible to buy from companies that manufacture in the uk so there employees are paying taxes here. I'd sooner pay a bit more to know that some of it is making it's way back into the system (yes I know not everyone can do that).

Sorry to ramble on.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 1:09 pm
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Let's remanufacture all the cheap products brought in from the East over the last 20 years, use all that raw material in a clever way.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 1:09 pm
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Chipps reported on very interesting tour of Shimano a some editions ago where the designer talked about the designs evolving toward perfection, like rocks are worn smooth in the stream.

That article, and that very quote, sticks in my mind also.

the conceptual integrity of the software is lost as patches and features are added

How I know that pain.

This might be of interest to people in this thread:


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 1:14 pm
 mt
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Are Orange frames really made in Greetland? What about the P7 or any other of the frames that are tubes as opposed to fabrications.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 1:19 pm
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I think the Orange hardtails are made overseas. Which is a pity.

Did you watch Evan Davies' TV programmes recently? He talked to tailor who had moved all his production to the far east. The labour cost made up quite a small fraction of the sale price. It seemed to me that the extra costs of UK production would not make a big increase in price.

Perhaps this is where Orange are with their Halifax made FS frames - the bikes cost a bit more but we value the "Made in Britain" label.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 4:30 pm
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Buzz, thanks for reminding me that Honda Civics are made in Swindon. My 07 Honda Civic was the best car I've ever owned (build quality, reliability, fun, cheap to service, etc). The only car I ever regret getting rid of. I always think of it as a Japanese car but I'll try to remember in future it's actually a car made by a Japanese company in the UK.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 5:07 pm
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I'm Irish and for historic reasons we purport to shun English stuff however...

You make the best TV in the world (no one comes close) produce a huge amount of the western worlds best music (obviously not the chart rubbish) and set many of the worlds fashion trends. In the arts and culture you are top of the pile. Your engineers and architects are world renown.

On the mtb front, reynolds tubing and english steel hardtails in general are weapons of choice in Ireland. Hope hubs are good value and well designed and everyone has some Endura clothing. And we all try get a Wales or Scotland trip in each year.

I don't know about made in Britain but I certainly like to know it's designed in Britain.

Having lived in the UK for 6 years,d your NHS is truly wonderful - treasure it. In Ireland we pay through the nose for healthcare.

A lot of what you do is world class - unfortunately that seems to include putting yourselves down. We Irish are very similar in that regard. We need to stop.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 5:22 pm
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Nice post there, expressing much of what I feel.

I design and make wooden furniture in South London, using timber that mainly comes from old trees grown within about 40 miles of my workshop. Many of my clients love the fact that I can tell them where a tree grew and was felled. However, that's a bit of an aside...
[url= http://www.catchweasel.com ]Here if you're interested.[/url]

I've really tried to keep my mtb UK/European. There's a lot of Hope and Middleburn, a German frame, Swiss forks, Italian saddle etc. Without going for a Rohloff I can't find a European drivetrain. I believe there is a massive value in buying British and supporting an indigenous design and manufacturing industry. There is a sense of pride in making things - especially really good things.

That said, a lot of manufacturing work can be quite repetitive, but I'm pretty sure if you asked some of the remaining tool makers in Sheffield whether they wanted their current jobs or they'd prefer to work in a call centre I know what they'd say. A few posters have hinted at a crazy culture in the UK of pushing intelligent people away from getting their hands dirty. Schools encourage bright students towards academia and abstract city careers rather than towards high end vocational work. It's really short-sighted on so many levels.

I wish more people would invest in UK manufacturing. The 'savings' made by transferring overseas are illusory. Someone always pays. Greater global inequalities are no good for anyone. So, in a roundabout way, yes. Made in Britain does have meaning to me. I would always go for it first especially if it is, like Hope, the best you can buy.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 6:31 pm
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Brooks saddles.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 7:21 pm
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There's certainly a degree of kudos abroad with some of our tailoring and for sure our high-end shoemaking


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 7:26 pm
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nitewatches
iwiwatches
Harold Pinchbeck watches

http://www.asb-group.com/uk/msb.asp


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 7:43 pm
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I design and make wooden furniture in South London, using timber that mainly comes from old trees grown within about 40 miles of my workshop. Many of my clients love the fact that I can tell them where a tree grew and was felled. However, that's a bit of an aside...
Here if you're interested.

Wow, some great looking furniture there. I love the paperhound with the ears! But sadly it's way out of my furniture price range.


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 7:47 pm
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http://www.agmbatteries.com/

Saville Row suits
Bond Street jewellers

http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2010/may/18/english-wines-win-gold-medals


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 7:55 pm
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The 'made in..' sticker can just mean that.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/13/world/europe/13prato.html?scp=1&sq=%22made%20in%20italy%22&st=cse


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 9:17 pm
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[i]Orange Five
best bike in the world .. nuff said.[/i]

Correct. As long as It's got a Hope pack on.
& all this bollix about 'yeah but you can get cheaper than an Orange 5' is just that, bollix, cos you can also get dearer which (IMO) may not be as good.
This of course is a biased opinion cos I'm an old git (55 on Monday) & am currently nicely warmed by some Bruichladdie Port Charlotte, also 'made in Britain' 😕


 
Posted : 16/08/2011 9:32 pm
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World War Z

http://www.glasgow.gov.uk/en/News/World+War+Z.htm


 
Posted : 17/08/2011 6:07 am
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I had a conversation with my father in law, who own a Giant Anthem X1 and never rides it off road. He stated that the Giant has to be far superior to the Orange as they (Giant) have millions to invest, so how could Orange possibly compete or build a product which even comes close? My experience of throwing my Orange down the hills of Calderdale on a bi-weekly basis says different.

What's your experience of throwing Giant Trances (or whatever the equivalent model might be) down the hills of Calderdale?

I stand to be corrected but I'm sort of with your FiL- I'd think that for fairly complex things involving lots of prototyping and iterations then a big company like Giant, Trek etc. are likely to come up with a better design than Orange or, say, Brant.

I'm not an engineer though. And I'm not having a go at Orange or Brant, I think they both do what they do very well but somethings are maybe going to be done better by a bigger company.


 
Posted : 17/08/2011 9:08 am
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In 2010 manufacturing accounted for about 12% of our GDP versus financial services at 9%. As has been mentioned on this thread we are more of a low volume high tech manufacturer. Good article [url= http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/rogerbootle/7604386/British-manufacturing-is-bigger-than-you-think-and-its-likely-to-grow.html ]here[/url]

Another great one on this subject is on the Apple iPhone which a Chinese export success and damages the US trade balance despite being an American product. [url= http://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/economics/apples-iphone-reflects-distortion-in-us-china-trade-balance/story-e6frg926-1225972071136 ]here[/url]


 
Posted : 17/08/2011 1:26 pm
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