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#1
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This is nothing new.
Well, the "Manufactured in India" part is rather novel for a shortwave set. I had posted the original message simply because I found the company's history interesting, not out as any commentary on global manufacturing/trade. In any case, it actually is reassuring that it's not being put together by the Tecsun folks. junius |
#2
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![]() junius wrote: This is nothing new. Well, the "Manufactured in India" part is rather novel for a shortwave set. I suppose, but I wouldn't give it much thought. If the China and India combine into some sort of Asian Union then watch out, because it will be a real economic force. I had posted the original message simply because I found the company's history interesting, not out as any commentary on global manufacturing/trade. In any case, it actually is reassuring that it's not being put together by the Tecsun folks. I don't know who actually designed the Eton E1 - it could have been Tecsun or Degen I suppose. I believe that Tecsun is part of Degen and that the Eton radios come from one or more of their factories. Whether Degen/Tecsun farms out production to another company in India probably isn't as important as the original design and quality control applied during production. junius |
#3
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I don't know who actually designed the Eton E1 - it could have been
Tecsun or Degen I suppose. I believe that Tecsun is part of Degen and that the Eton radios come from one or more of their factories. Whether Degen/Tecsun farms out production to another company in India probably isn't as important as the original design and quality control applied during production. Right, well, quality control was at the heart of my "better Bharat than Tecsun" comment. I don't think we need to go into Tecsun's problems in producing a quality Satellit 800. That went on for years...with constant threads in this forum on whether or not the 4th or 5th generation of the '800 had finally "worked out all the kinks", etc. It became quite meaningless in the end. I wouldn't want to be the guy looking to buy a used Satellit 800, that's for certain. It's encouraging that with the manufacture of the E1, there seems to be, from what is coming out so far, consistently decent quality control applied. junius |
#4
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![]() junius wrote: I don't know who actually designed the Eton E1 - it could have been Tecsun or Degen I suppose. I believe that Tecsun is part of Degen and that the Eton radios come from one or more of their factories. Whether Degen/Tecsun farms out production to another company in India probably isn't as important as the original design and quality control applied during production. Right, well, quality control was at the heart of my "better Bharat than Tecsun" comment. I don't think we need to go into Tecsun's problems in producing a quality Satellit 800. That went on for years...with constant threads in this forum on whether or not the 4th or 5th generation of the '800 had finally "worked out all the kinks", etc. It became quite meaningless in the end. I wouldn't want to be the guy looking to buy a used Satellit 800, that's for certain. It's encouraging that with the manufacture of the E1, there seems to be, from what is coming out so far, consistently decent quality control applied. The 800 was overhyped vaporware for a very long time. When it was finally delivered the quality was poor especially considering the price. Given the multiple failed deliveries I would fault Grundig/Eton as much as the manufacturer. They appear to be little more than a marketing and distribution company. And yet the QC on more modestly priced radios like the Degen DE1103 and several of it's stablemates is quite good in my experience, as is the Tecsun PL500. |
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