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[GMCnet] Chinese parts are great for keeping your trouble shouting skills sharp for a lifetime. [message #320673] Wed, 19 July 2017 10:48 Go to next message
BobDunahugh is currently offline  BobDunahugh   United States
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Registered: October 2010
Location: Cedar Rapids, IA
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Senior Member
Got caught out of town with a Chinese starter solenoid problem. As I had put it on me original starter. Lasted 3 weeks. Got ticked with figuring out what now went wrong next. Replaced the entire starter/solenoid. That unit lasted 6 weeks before taking out my start switch, fusible link, and neutral start switch. Replaced starter again. Next came another neutral switch. How I just want to get home to find USA made parts. Bob Dunahugh
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Re: [GMCnet] Chinese parts are great for keeping your trouble shouting skills sharp for a lifetime. [message #320674 is a reply to message #320673] Wed, 19 July 2017 11:16 Go to previous messageGo to next message
James Hupy is currently offline  James Hupy   United States
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Registered: May 2010
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Senior Member
Those starter solenoids are a classic case of offshore parts. There used to
be 2 copper studs that stuck through the solenoid housing that the battery
cable and the conductor that entered the starter housing fastened to. They
were very robust and when they arced away sufficiently, could be turned
180° to expose a fresh surface. No longer. Same said for the contactor disc
on the end of the solenoid plunger. Used to be thick, solid, copper. Now,
an aluminum disc about 1/2 the thickness, with a thin piece of copper foil
laminated to it. Cheap, cheesy, crapola. Sure as heck nothing like the
Delco stuff of the past.
This is only one example. There are many more, particularly with automotive
electrical parts. fan clutches, water pumps, alternators, dimmer switches,
and on and on. Hard to install these parts, and send them out the door and
down the road, knowing what we know about the quality of this stuff. I feel
bad for Bob and Linda. An on the road failure of this crap has more
implications for them than just mild inconvenience. Being stranded with a
handicapped passenger is a very bad thing. Wish I had answers for it.
Almost getting to the point of going back to rebuilding stuff ourselves.
Jim Hupy
Salem, Or
78 GMC ROYALE 403

On Jul 19, 2017 8:49 AM, "Bob Dunahugh" wrote:

> Got caught out of town with a Chinese starter solenoid problem. As I had
> put it on me original starter. Lasted 3 weeks. Got ticked with figuring out
> what now went wrong next. Replaced the entire starter/solenoid. That unit
> lasted 6 weeks before taking out my start switch, fusible link, and neutral
> start switch. Replaced starter again. Next came another neutral switch.
> How I just want to get home to find USA made parts. Bob Dunahugh
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
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Re: [GMCnet] Chinese parts are great for keeping your trouble shouting skills sharp for a lifetime. [message #320677 is a reply to message #320674] Wed, 19 July 2017 11:41 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Ken Henderson is currently offline  Ken Henderson   United States
Messages: 8726
Registered: March 2004
Location: Americus, GA
Karma: 9
Senior Member
Hear, hear!

I depend heavily on my local repair shop, now on its second owner during,
to my knowledge, 90 years in business.

Ken H.

On Wed, Jul 19, 2017 at 12:16 PM, James Hupy wrote:

> ​...
> Cheap, cheesy, crapola. Sure as heck nothing like the
> Delco stuff of the past.
> This is only one example. There are many more, particularly with automotive
> electrical parts. fan clutches, water pumps, alternators, dimmer switches,
> and on and on.
>
​...​


> Almost getting to the point of going back to rebuilding stuff ourselves.
>
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Ken Henderson
Americus, GA
www.gmcwipersetc.com
Large Wiring Diagrams
76 X-Birchaven
76 X-Palm Beach
Re: [GMCnet] Chinese parts are great for keeping your trouble shouting skills sharp for a lifetime. [message #320678 is a reply to message #320677] Wed, 19 July 2017 14:11 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Carl S. is currently offline  Carl S.   United States
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Registered: January 2009
Location: Tucson, AZ.
Karma: 13
Senior Member

Ken Henderson wrote on Wed, 19 July 2017 09:41
Hear, hear!

I depend heavily on my local repair shop, now on its second owner during,
to my knowledge, 90 years in business.

Ken H.



Speaking of which, how did your recent Onan starter rebuild go?


Carl Stouffer '75 ex Palm Beach Tucson, AZ. Chuck Aulgur Reaction Arm Disc Brakes, Quadrabags, 3.70 LSD final drive, Lenzi knuckles/hubs, Dodge Truck 16" X 8" front wheels, Rear American Eagles, Solar battery charging. GMCSJ and GMCMI member
Re: [GMCnet] Chinese parts are great for keeping your trouble shouting skills sharp for a lifetime. [message #320715 is a reply to message #320677] Thu, 20 July 2017 10:35 Go to previous messageGo to next message
midlf is currently offline  midlf   United States
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Registered: July 2007
Location: SE Wisc. (Palmyra)
Karma: 1
Senior Member
We each have to search for these quality rebuilders in our local area. Then patronize them. I am fortunate to have one I use. It's 25 miles away and for less miles I could hit abut 25 parts stores where i can get "guaranteed forever" crap. They have been around for a very long time. Moved out of their original innner city location to a new facility located close to a large number of commercial and industrial vehicle users and shops. Family owned and the knows what they are doing. Is it inconvenient to drive past auto parts stores to go there? Yes. However not as inconvenient as having to R&R crap.

So how to find these rebuilders? Stop in and ask local independent repair shops if they know of such a local rebuilder. They are not inclined to put in guaranteed crap as the part may be guaranteed but they have to eat their own labor costs on a guaranteed repair. You are not taking any business away from them as they probably don't want to work on your GMC anyway.


Ken Henderson wrote on Wed, 19 July 2017 11:41
Hear, hear!

I depend heavily on my local repair shop, now on its second owner during,
to my knowledge, 90 years in business.

Ken H.




Steve Southworth
1974 Glacier TZE064V100150 (for workin on)
1975 Transmode TZE365V100394 (parts & spares)
Palmyra WI
Re: [GMCnet] Chinese parts are great for keeping your trouble shouting skills sharp for a lifetime. [message #320734 is a reply to message #320715] Thu, 20 July 2017 18:49 Go to previous messageGo to next message
thesmith is currently offline  thesmith   United States
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Location: Cary, NC
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Senior Member
Those parts are being supplied by American companies who constantly reduce prices they are willing to pay manufacturers. The Chinese can build whatever quality you like, but if the buyers from American companies won't pay for it how is it their fault?

Sadly it's a case of we generally get what we pay for.....


Cary, NC 1978 Center Kitchen Royale.
Re: [GMCnet] Chinese parts are great for keeping your trouble shouting skills sharp for a lifetime. [message #320741 is a reply to message #320734] Thu, 20 July 2017 20:32 Go to previous messageGo to next message
USAussie is currently offline  USAussie   United States
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Registered: July 2007
Location: Sydney, Australia
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Senior Member
Cary,

You are 100% correct!

When I was a Field Rep for Hamilton Standard I visited the Xian Aircraft Factory in Xian, they built the vertical stabilizer for
Boeing 737's and I don't think Boeing accept "cheap Chinese parts!"

Regards,
Rob M.
Sydney, Australia
AUS '75 Avion - The Blue Streak TZE365V100428
USA '75 Avion - Double Trouble TZE365V100426
USA '77 Kingsley - TZE 267V100808

-----Original Message-----
From: Gmclist [mailto:gmclist-bounces@list.gmcnet.org] On Behalf Of Pete Smith
Sent: Friday, July 21, 2017 9:49 AM
To: gmclist@list.gmcnet.org
Subject: Re: [GMCnet] Chinese parts are great for keeping your trouble shouting skills sharp for a lifetime.

Those parts are being supplied by American companies who constantly reduce prices they are willing to pay manufacturers. The
Chinese can build whatever quality you like, but if the buyers from American companies won't pay for it how is it their fault?

Sadly it's a case of we generally get what we pay for.....
--
Cary, NC



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Regards, Rob M. (USAussie) The Pedantic Mechanic Sydney, Australia '75 Avion - AUS - The Blue Streak TZE365V100428 '75 Avion - USA - Double Trouble TZE365V100426
Re: [GMCnet] Chinese parts are great for keeping your trouble shouting skills sharp for a lifetime. [message #320754 is a reply to message #320673] Fri, 21 July 2017 00:17 Go to previous messageGo to next message
BobDunahugh is currently offline  BobDunahugh   United States
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Location: Cedar Rapids, IA
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I know of several companies that have had the Chinese cut corners on their own.

Bob Dunahugh
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Re: [GMCnet] Chinese parts are great for keeping your trouble shouting skills sharp for a lifetime. [message #320755 is a reply to message #320754] Fri, 21 July 2017 06:14 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Ken Henderson is currently offline  Ken Henderson   United States
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Registered: March 2004
Location: Americus, GA
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Senior Member
Dave Greenberg was in charge of IBM's earliest operations in China. He
used to tell us that the Chinese were good at making 'most anything -- but
that it was necessary to watch them "like a hawk", because they were always
looking for a way to cut corners or cheapen things. Seems they haven't
changed with the passage of time.

Ken H.


On Fri, Jul 21, 2017 at 1:17 AM, Bob Dunahugh wrote:

> I know of several companies that have had the Chinese cut corners on their
> own.
>
>
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Ken Henderson
Americus, GA
www.gmcwipersetc.com
Large Wiring Diagrams
76 X-Birchaven
76 X-Palm Beach
Re: [GMCnet] Chinese parts are great for keeping your trouble shouting skills sharp for a lifetime. [message #320757 is a reply to message #320673] Fri, 21 July 2017 08:44 Go to previous messageGo to next message
JohnL455 is currently offline  JohnL455   United States
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Registered: October 2006
Location: Woodstock, IL
Karma: 12
Senior Member
The other issue is quality drift between the final prototype and the 1000 actual pieces you get stuck with. The other reason the stuff gets made there is companies here thumb their noses at projects that China will actually take and produce. You try to get it done here and sometimes you succeed but often give up on the process out of necessity.

John Lebetski
Woodstock, IL
77 Eleganza II
Re: [GMCnet] Chinese parts are great for keeping your trouble shouting skills sharp for a lifetime. [message #320762 is a reply to message #320757] Fri, 21 July 2017 09:31 Go to previous messageGo to next message
James Hupy is currently offline  James Hupy   United States
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Registered: May 2010
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Senior Member
This problem is not entirely a Chinese problem. Similar stuff happens
worldwide, including here in the U.S.A. When price alone determines the
specifications of product design, quality and longevity suffer greatly. It
could be automobiles, consumer electronics, you name it. I personally hate
it. It becomes a trade off. We have a microcosm of the whole issue in our
GMC community. Even on a personal level. The wireless air system that I
build contains parts from domestic sources as well as offshore. I source
them not by price, but by compatibility and suitability. How it winds up
is, prospective buyers, when told the cost, frequently hit the "sour
grapes" button. The cost for custom built, small batch items, will always
be high. It is the nature of things. I sure don't have the answers, neither
does Manny, or Jim K. or Jim Bounds, or a dozen other people involved in
aftermarketing parts for 40 year old relics.
Jim Hupy
Salem, Or
78 GMC ROYALE 403

On Jul 21, 2017 6:55 AM, "John R. Lebetski" wrote:

> The other issue is quality drift between the final prototype and the 1000
> actual pieces you get stuck with. The other reason the stuff gets made there
> is companies here thumb their noses at projects that China will actually
> take and produce. You try to get it done here and sometimes you succeed but
> often give up on the process out of necessity.
> --
> John Lebetski
> Woodstock, IL
> 77 Eleganza II
>
>
> _______________________________________________
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Re: [GMCnet] Chinese parts are great for keeping your trouble shouting skills sharp for a lifetime. [message #320788 is a reply to message #320762] Fri, 21 July 2017 13:01 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Emery Stora is currently offline  Emery Stora   United States
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Registered: January 2011
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Senior Member
One good thing that China makes is Tsingtao beer. (ting dow)

Emery Stora

> On Jul 21, 2017, at 8:31 AM, James Hupy wrote:
>
> This problem is not entirely a Chinese problem. Similar stuff happens
> worldwide, including here in the U.S.A. When price alone determines the
> specifications of product design, quality and longevity suffer greatly. It
> could be automobiles, consumer electronics, you name it. I personally hate
> it. It becomes a trade off. We have a microcosm of the whole issue in our
> GMC community. Even on a personal level. The wireless air system that I
> build contains parts from domestic sources as well as offshore. I source
> them not by price, but by compatibility and suitability. How it winds up
> is, prospective buyers, when told the cost, frequently hit the "sour
> grapes" button. The cost for custom built, small batch items, will always
> be high. It is the nature of things. I sure don't have the answers, neither
> does Manny, or Jim K. or Jim Bounds, or a dozen other people involved in
> aftermarketing parts for 40 year old relics.
> Jim Hupy
> Salem, Or
> 78 GMC ROYALE 403
>
> On Jul 21, 2017 6:55 AM, "John R. Lebetski" wrote:
>
>> The other issue is quality drift between the final prototype and the 1000
>> actual pieces you get stuck with. The other reason the stuff gets made there
>> is companies here thumb their noses at projects that China will actually
>> take and produce. You try to get it done here and sometimes you succeed but
>> often give up on the process out of necessity.
>> --
>> John Lebetski
>> Woodstock, IL
>> 77 Eleganza II
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> GMCnet mailing list
>> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
>> http://list.gmcnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gmclist_list.gmcnet.org
>>
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Re: [GMCnet] Chinese parts are great for keeping your trouble shouting skills sharp for a lifetime. [message #320799 is a reply to message #320788] Fri, 21 July 2017 16:15 Go to previous messageGo to next message
powerjon is currently offline  powerjon   United States
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I vote for that!

JR Wright
> On Jul 21, 2017, at 2:01 PM, Emery Stora wrote:
>
> One good thing that China makes is Tsingtao beer. (ting dow)
>
> Emery Stora
>


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J.R. Wright
GMC GreatLaker
GMC Eastern States
GMCMI
78 30' Buskirk Stretch
75 Avion Under Reconstruction
Michigan
Re: [GMCnet] Chinese parts are great for keeping your trouble shouting skills sharp for a lifetime. [message #320807 is a reply to message #320788] Fri, 21 July 2017 18:30 Go to previous messageGo to next message
jimk is currently offline  jimk   United States
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Registered: July 2006
Location: Belmont, CA
Karma: 9
Senior Member
Emery,
those people probably put in used radiator fluid.
I will refuse that Beer if you offered it to me.
Dog food was tainted and killed many animals.


On Fri, Jul 21, 2017 at 11:01 AM, Emery Stora wrote:

> One good thing that China makes is Tsingtao beer. (ting dow)
>
> Emery Stora
>
>> On Jul 21, 2017, at 8:31 AM, James Hupy wrote:
>>
>> This problem is not entirely a Chinese problem. Similar stuff happens
>> worldwide, including here in the U.S.A. When price alone determines the
>> specifications of product design, quality and longevity suffer greatly.
> It
>> could be automobiles, consumer electronics, you name it. I personally
> hate
>> it. It becomes a trade off. We have a microcosm of the whole issue in our
>> GMC community. Even on a personal level. The wireless air system that I
>> build contains parts from domestic sources as well as offshore. I source
>> them not by price, but by compatibility and suitability. How it winds up
>> is, prospective buyers, when told the cost, frequently hit the "sour
>> grapes" button. The cost for custom built, small batch items, will
> always
>> be high. It is the nature of things. I sure don't have the answers,
> neither
>> does Manny, or Jim K. or Jim Bounds, or a dozen other people involved in
>> aftermarketing parts for 40 year old relics.
>> Jim Hupy
>> Salem, Or
>> 78 GMC ROYALE 403
>>
>> On Jul 21, 2017 6:55 AM, "John R. Lebetski"
> wrote:
>>
>>> The other issue is quality drift between the final prototype and the
> 1000
>>> actual pieces you get stuck with. The other reason the stuff gets made
> there
>>> is companies here thumb their noses at projects that China will actually
>>> take and produce. You try to get it done here and sometimes you succeed
> but
>>> often give up on the process out of necessity.
>>> --
>>> John Lebetski
>>> Woodstock, IL
>>> 77 Eleganza II
>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> GMCnet mailing list
>>> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
>>> http://list.gmcnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gmclist_list.gmcnet.org
>>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> GMCnet mailing list
>> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
>> http://list.gmcnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gmclist_list.gmcnet.org
>
>
> _______________________________________________
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--
Jim Kanomata
Applied/GMC, Newark,CA
jimk@appliedairfilters.com
http://www.appliedgmc.com
1-800-752-7502
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Jim Kanomata
Applied/GMC
jimk@appliedairfilters.com
www.appliedgmc.com
1-800-752-7502
Re: [GMCnet] Chinese parts are great for keeping your trouble shouting skills sharp for a lifetime. [message #320812 is a reply to message #320788] Fri, 21 July 2017 19:35 Go to previous message
Richard Denney is currently offline  Richard Denney   United States
Messages: 920
Registered: April 2010
Karma: 9
Senior Member
We always pronounced it ching-dow, which I believe is as correct as the
western tongue can make it, but which can be horribly misinterpreted by
those with whom I worked or who might have been at the next table in San
Antonio.

Rick "Chinese restaurants in San Antonio can be dangerous places" Denney

On Fri, Jul 21, 2017 at 2:01 PM Emery Stora wrote:

> One good thing that China makes is Tsingtao beer. (ting dow)
>
> Emery Stora
>
> --
Rick Denney
73 x-Glacier 230 "Jaws"
Off-list email to rick at rickdenney dot com
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