[TowerTalk] US Tower price increase

Mike & Becca Krzystyniak k9mk at flash.net
Mon Jan 2 16:12:04 EST 2017


I do hope this is some kind of a mistake.  
HRO had one last year about this time with tower prices, but not this
agregious.

I bought my HDX-589MDPL from HRO for 1/3 the current HRO Web site list last
January-15 (that was FOB).  
Add the base and all the tower options you want, tax title and license and
then shipped to your door it was about half.

I was about to pull the trigger on a 689 model.  
However if these prices hold the economics of Rohn-55GSR or maybe going to
SSV need to be double checked.

73  Mike K9MK/5



-----Original Message-----
From: TowerTalk [mailto:towertalk-bounces at contesting.com] On Behalf Of Jim
Brown
Sent: Monday, January 02, 2017 1:39 PM
To: towertalk at contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] US Tower price increase

Great response, Jim. BUT -- the increase noted by the original poster was
that the increase was overnight!

Several possible reasons for this. One is that business operations for the
ham market are often supported by higher volume and higher margin operations
for other markets. When those other markets fall apart, they no longer
support the ham market, or contribute to economies of scale that allow lower
prices.

Another is corporate mergers, which can change business priorities, change
where products are manufactured.

But assuming corporate greed as the reason for all such price increases is
unreasonable. It certainly can be, but there are many other reasons.

73, Jim K9YC

On Mon,1/2/2017 11:13 AM, jimlux wrote:
> On 1/2/17 10:50 AM, john at kk9a.com wrote:
>> Wow! I bought one of these new in the 80's for considerably less than 
>> last year's pricing from Texas Towers.  It would now be unaffordable.  
>> Does anyone else sell US Towers besides HRO?  I guess used pricing 
>> will also go up considerably.
>>
>
> 1985 to 2016 is 1:2.26 just from inflation.  I would suspect things 
> made by mostly hand labor and steel would go up faster: it's not like 
> a radio or computer, where you get economies of scale and lower cost 
> from higher levels of integration. A $1000 radio today is MUCH more 
> capable than a $1000 radio in 1985 over a broad spectrum of 
> capabilities, and is less than half the price, in 1985 dollars.
>
> However a tower is basically the same thing, but made by people whose 
> wages have gone up, with raw materials the price which has risen, and 
> trucked by companies where the vehicle, labor, and fuel costs have 
> gone up.
>
> Oil in 1985 $15/bbl, today $30/bbl (and it was pushing $100/bbl not 
> too long ago), roughly tracks inflation
>
> Manufacturing wages roughly doubled roughly tracking inflation- 
> although that's tricky, because large unionized mfrs have a large 
> effect on average wage calculations
>
> Steel was $15/cwt in 1985, runs 45-50/cwt now.. the USGS analysis says 
> that the various finanicial crises drove this increase (that is, 
> mining iron didn't cost more.. making steel did, for various reasons) 
> (cwt = 100 lb)
>
> Some manufactured goods have become more expensive because of debt
> service: the company took on debt to expand or stay in business, so 
> now the end price includes interest, as well as the cost of raw 
> materials and manufacturing cost.
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