Hello, again. I am doing my analysis on scratch-building the 4B. Here are some of what I have discovered:
1) There has been a change of ownership in the kit and parts company. The lead time on a quick build kit is 14-18 months at a price of $86,000. The new owner has a goal of reducing the lead time to 12 months. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1Spfs8QkYE&t=809s
2) There has been a significant price increase from the former $72,000 for the quick build kit. This is not supported by general price inflation or the specific increased prices in chomoly steel tubing or alum sheet as far as I can tell. However, these price increases are supported by the growth in demand. In the above video link, the new owner seems to indicate that he wants a boutique business model meaning he prefers lower demand from higher prices (compared to a high growth model with lower prices). The market antidote to boutique high prices is competition. I don't know if Bob Barrows would want multiple parts/kits builders or just the one, though.
3) A hybrid kit/scratch building is an option based on Goldberg's prior business model. The new owner has changed the BearhawkAircraft.com web site and does not have the "store" section working yet. So the old parts and subkits catalog and prices have to be found using the waybackmachine. I am assuming that all of these parts will see similar price increases to the quick build kit if they will be available like the old business model. With high demand and long lead times, the new owner may opt out (or de-prioritize) of selling component parts and subkits.
4) In a Kitplanes article written by Jared Yates, he notes that "Before my factory visit, I differentiated Bearhawk scratch builders from Bearhawk kit builders. But after the visit, I realized that all Bearhawks are built from scratch." He goes on to note that the quickbuild kit airplanes have a higher resale value. That would not only mean more money to buy the kit, but also more money to buy greater property insurance annually and greater interest to bear on the higher priced plane (even if we are paying cash and consider the interest an opportunity cost). https://www.kitplanes.com/quickbuild-behind-the-scenes/
With this info, I am left to wonder how many man hours it takes to build to the equivalent level of a quickbuild kit. The Mexican workers will likely have less combined number of hours to build with their experience and jigs. So my question to the scratch-builders here, how many hours did it take you to build to the equivalent level of a quickbuild kit?
1) There has been a change of ownership in the kit and parts company. The lead time on a quick build kit is 14-18 months at a price of $86,000. The new owner has a goal of reducing the lead time to 12 months. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1Spfs8QkYE&t=809s
2) There has been a significant price increase from the former $72,000 for the quick build kit. This is not supported by general price inflation or the specific increased prices in chomoly steel tubing or alum sheet as far as I can tell. However, these price increases are supported by the growth in demand. In the above video link, the new owner seems to indicate that he wants a boutique business model meaning he prefers lower demand from higher prices (compared to a high growth model with lower prices). The market antidote to boutique high prices is competition. I don't know if Bob Barrows would want multiple parts/kits builders or just the one, though.
3) A hybrid kit/scratch building is an option based on Goldberg's prior business model. The new owner has changed the BearhawkAircraft.com web site and does not have the "store" section working yet. So the old parts and subkits catalog and prices have to be found using the waybackmachine. I am assuming that all of these parts will see similar price increases to the quick build kit if they will be available like the old business model. With high demand and long lead times, the new owner may opt out (or de-prioritize) of selling component parts and subkits.
4) In a Kitplanes article written by Jared Yates, he notes that "Before my factory visit, I differentiated Bearhawk scratch builders from Bearhawk kit builders. But after the visit, I realized that all Bearhawks are built from scratch." He goes on to note that the quickbuild kit airplanes have a higher resale value. That would not only mean more money to buy the kit, but also more money to buy greater property insurance annually and greater interest to bear on the higher priced plane (even if we are paying cash and consider the interest an opportunity cost). https://www.kitplanes.com/quickbuild-behind-the-scenes/
With this info, I am left to wonder how many man hours it takes to build to the equivalent level of a quickbuild kit. The Mexican workers will likely have less combined number of hours to build with their experience and jigs. So my question to the scratch-builders here, how many hours did it take you to build to the equivalent level of a quickbuild kit?
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