Heck yeah! I'll even chip in for gas!I'm about a half hour from Tar River's address, anyone want me to go take a look?
Wouldn't be a bad excuse for a bike ride this weekend...
Beans and Brats? That should be enough gas!!!!Heck yeah! I'll even chip in for gas!
So did you head out to Tar River's facility?I'm about a half hour from Tar River's address, anyone want me to go take a look?
Wouldn't be a bad excuse for a bike ride this weekend...
I'm curious, but only as long as you're not chased off the property by a pack of guard dogs or worse.Got tied up last weekend so never made the trip. I'll see if I can wander over this weekend.
Who's the fabricator? Surely they didn't have you sign an NDA.I talked to the fabricator who told me who they supplied recently with this product in hopes of finding one in stock. The product supplied is often specified by the reseller with certain options, grease fittings or not etc.
In post #25 I included the paragraphs below from MTL's website. So which is it? Do they "custom manufacture" or do they "contract with one of the largest production plants in the US"? Are either of those true? It's just crap on a website, like a "Made in the USA" sticker on a grapple.After some web search time and many phone calls, I discovered some interesting facts. Most companies selling this type of grapple simply purchased them from a US based contract manufacturer/ fabricator.
I couldn't agree more, but in order to do that we need to know which ones are actually making attachments and implements in the US. I know my MX was mostly built in Japan and I'm ok with that. I also know that the Everything Attachments grapple, box blade, land leveler and tooth bar that I purchased from them this year were made at their facility in NC.As tractor owners we need to support all of the US based independent manufacturers and sales companies that provide us with many great alternatives than just buying attachments at your main dealers. I've purchased attachments from a long list of these companies.
Many of these companies are not distributors, they are contract manufacturers, I’m not sure you are understanding the difference. They are selling a product that is built to their engineering and design, with components that they specify and often free issue to an outside fabricator/ assembler. This type of business model allows the fabricator to remain busy working at volumes and allows the attachment companies to produce efficiently. They are not pretending to be manufacturers they are actually employing US companies to fabricate and assemble their equipment.I couldn't agree more, but in order to do that we need to know which ones are actually making attachments and implements in the US. I know my MX was mostly built in Japan and I'm ok with that. I also know that the Everything Attachments grapple, box blade, land leveler and tooth bar that I purchased from them this year were made at their facility in NC.
I have a Land Pride hydraulic front snow blade, rear blade, rotary cutter and pallet forks and am confident that they were all manufactured in the US too. If I'm going to hand over thousands of dollars for something I would rather it weren't made in China.
By the way, what kind of product support do you expect from a company that pretends to be a manufacturer but is merely a distributor? If MTL, Tar River and similar are only distributors, why the subterfuge, why pretend to be manufacturing implements and attachments? This is why they have crappy web pages that a 3 year old could put together, no videos of testing, no videos showing workers building the products we're buying with order numbers often in plain view, no Ted and Travis equivalents, just a PO BOX and a building to store inventory in.
So what's the name of the "Denton NC fabricator?" If you don't know the name then you really don't know anything.
I understand just fine. We call them vendors when they design a part to our specifications, parts that we actually design and test. I'm fortunate to work in an industry where nothing is made by vendors overseas but I'm still not convinced that the MTL and Tar River types "design" anything. It is purely conjecture on your part that they do, just as it's conjecture on my part that they don't. Since it's hard if not impossible to get any verifiable information on these companies that could just as easily be buying from China, I won't support them.Many of these companies are not distributors, they are contract manufacturers, I’m not sure you are understanding the difference. They are selling a product that is built to their engineering and design, with components that they specify and often free issue to an outside fabricator/ assembler. This type of business model allows the fabricator to remain busy working at volumes and allows the attachment companies to produce efficiently. They are not pretending to be manufacturers they are actually employing US companies to fabricate and assemble their equipment.
Thanks for the recommendation but I'm probably going to buy an Iron & Oak 30 ton horizontal/vertical model. I've been looking at them for over a year now. I want a good one but I'm not going to be using it to split 3 cords of wood every day so $9k for a splitter wouldn't make sense for me. That said, the 30 Ton horizontal commercial unit with log lift is appealing at a mere $7,800.I was also looking for a US built log splitter a few years ago, take a look at All Wood Log Splitters, I purchased an Oak model and have never looked back. US made, veteran owned company, great products and service, serious equipment.