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"Michael A. Terrell" ) writes:
"David G. Nagel" wrote: No. They were very succussful until another company who's name starts with a "Z" bought them out so that they could get a foothold in the home computer business. They ("Z") left Heathkit to flounder without proper finances until Heath closed. With proper finance and control a company could succeed with out much trouble. There are several "kit" companies out there that seem to be doing very well. Dave WD9BDZ According to trade journals at the time Zenith wanted to bid on a large computer contract with the US government, but they were not building computers yet. So, they bought Heathkit to get their existing government business, and to get the contract. Whatever Zenith wanted to do with the company, I don't think it's that simple. Circa 1976, Heathkit had to recall a 2M transceiver (I think it was a handheld) because it was generating spurs, I think in the aero band. If I recall, it wasn't that it couldn't be a clean output, but that it couldn't be clean with the equipment the average ham had. So they called them in, and eventually came up with a new design. As times went by the equipment became more complicated. And then it became harder and harder to make them something that anyone could build. If in the fifties they'd sell a shortwave receiver kit with the coil slugs "pre-adjusted", a couple of decades later they'd be selling a kit that had some crucial circuitry in a preassembled module. Over that same period, they'd be selling tube gear that was well oriented towards hand wiring (so it made little difference whether it was wired in a factory or by the end user) to solid state devices on circuit boards. The latter was more conducive to automated manufacturing, and the moreso the more years that passed. So the cost of manufacturing went down (I got my DVD player two years ago for fifty dollars, and that is far more complicated a device than any Heathkit till at least the mid-seventies if not later), while the overhead of making something a kit stayed the same or more. Remember, Heathkit did not cater to the hobbyist, even if they were among the customers. Heathkits were intended to be built by anyone. And they were seen as a way of getting something a bit cheaper if you were willing to put some time into the project. As time went on, the automated manufacturing and one assumes overseas manufacturing lowered the cost of manufactured equipment. A color tv set was still a relatively major purchase forty years ago, while today if someone needs a tv set they just go out and buy it that day. There became less interest in building the kit except by a relative handful of the population. I would think the mass consumer items, the tv sets and the Boonie Bikes and such, helped to subsidize the amateur radio equipment. If Heath had to live off the profits from just the ham equipment, they wouldn't have lasted so many decades. But towards the end, they had really complicated equipment for sale to hams, and likely the "kit building" of those required less time by the builder than the old gear, and it was expensive. Heath had become less of a common name, and it seemed like the later catalogs were slimmer and less interesting than a couple of decades before. Combine all these, and the kit business as done by Heath couldn't survive. The kit companies that have come along since, they cater to a much more limited market. They cater to a hobbyist crowd, and while they may need handholding, one would hope not as much as someone walking in off the street who's never soldered and wants to save some money by building that color tv set. Heath spelled out everything in their manuals, while I suspect many of the more recent kit companies say things like "stuff the board, solder the components, and then turn it on" (not so brief, but not nearly as specific as Heath). That saves money. And if you sell products where the kit building is as important as the end project, ie a regen receiver kit where someone can have fun building it and can have fun playing with something new, but who doesn't expect to use it as a main receiver, then you are dealing with a different market than Heath, where they were selling the end items and they had to have a transceiver that was competitive with what everyone else was selling, be it the HW-100 in the late sixties or the Yaesu or Kenwood lookalike that was sold towards the end of the company's life. Michael VE2BVW |
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