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....I tend to buy so called quality brand names but even those are becoming a liability. Everything from knife blades to plumbing fittings have reduced in quality probably due to them being bulk made with lower grade materials to save the manufacturers money but these savings are never passed on to us, only the poorer quality is.

If I pay a premium for a brand name over a budget brand, I expect premium quality, but sadly this is no longer the case.
 
Sorry to bring up an old post, but im new to all this so looking through all sorts of stuff for information really.....I unfortunatly have no clue what brands you are all going on about here....but we all give praise to good things we buy, so I dont see the harm in naming and shaming the crap stuff being produced (regardless of brand)....to me thats letting them off the hook as were turning a blind eye to it....these companys will only fix it (if they give a monkeys) when word of mouth about its dodgy produced products starts hitting their bottom line....hope its not against forum rules to name these brands, especially any made here in the UK as I for one still hope that "Made in the UK" means something special.
 
Sorry to bring up an old post, but im new to all this so looking through all sorts of stuff for information really.....I unfortunatly have no clue what brands you are all going on about here....but we all give praise to good things we buy, so I dont see the harm in naming and shaming the crap stuff being produced (regardless of brand)....to me thats letting them off the hook as were turning a blind eye to it....these companys will only fix it (if they give a monkeys) when word of mouth about its dodgy produced products starts hitting their bottom line....hope its not against forum rules to name these brands, especially any made here in the UK as I for one still hope that "Made in the UK" means something special.


Re-cycled metals explains a lot of the problems with tools today.

Hundreds of tons of high quality (old) hand tools have been shipped to Africa from Britain over the past 30 years - so if you fancy a safari and a shopping expedition for tools, that's the place to go.

Or a bit nearer, Axminster tools in Devon - they even do mail order.
 
I read through this old thread with interest. Certainly lots of the valves and fittings that we sell now don't compare favourably with those we sold when I started, back in the mid eighties.

Relatively speaking, some plumbing gear has got WAY cheaper. Some of it is better, some is worse.

A few months ago, we came across some archived invoices from 1972. I was surprised that endfeed fittings were selling for more or less the same price then as we sell them now, 40 years later. The quality was probably better - mostly delcop or nibco, but the relative price was way higher back then.

The day I started, in 1986, the special offer was a Chaffoteaux Celtic 220 RS combi, at £465 + VAT for boiler and flue and including a free Switchmaster 300 timeclock. Today we are selling an Ideal Independent 24 with flue and clock for £16 less. I don't know exactly what inflation has been since then, but I know that a 23 yr old trainee counterhand was on £90 a week, because I still have the old pay envelope. (Remember when wages came in cash on a friday in a little brown envelope?)

A combi filling loop (about £15 back then) was considered a luxury item. A common order with a combi was a pair of washing machine taps and a w/m hose for a makeshift filling point. :)

At the same time, we offered a cheap bathroom suite (low level pan, plastic cistern, 22x16 basin on brackets, 3mm bath, cheapo seat, acrylic head taps) for just under £150 plus VAT, and we sold loads of them. I could probably just about source the same thing at the same price today - problem is, no one would buy it, not because the plumber would reject the quality, but because the householder would reject the appearance.

Cylinders reached a low point about 10 years ago, with the so-called "medium duty" or "tiger" cylinders. I remember talking to a manufacturer at the time - an old fashioned coppersmith - and he could weep that his customers demanded such a low price that he had to make rubbish. I would hate to try to take an immersion heater out of one with side immersions - the boss is brazed onto a wall so thin that it surely must tear like tin-foil. Since part L came in, cylinder quality has improved a lot - walls are thicker, coils are longer, and the return rate is back to where it was 25 years ago.

I just looked up our sales on 15mm isolating valves. It doesn't make pretty reading.

2.5% heavy pattern
2% full-flow heavy pattern
95.5% cheap 'n' cheerful, guaranteed till the van gets to the end of the road. :)

On another thread a little while ago, I looked up the stats for brass-bodies, copper upstand b/e ballvalves. I think it was 1% of total BE ballvalve sales - the rest were all plastic.

I think that when a certain percentage of the market demands a lower price, and accepts the drop in quality, it no longer makes economic sense for even big brand manufacturers to invest in the top quality product. They are more interested in their competitive position, so while they may still be better than the very cheapest, since the standard of the cheapest has dropped, the standard of the best has also dropped.

Ray
 
The upside is that all those low quality, unreliable, short life-span fixture and fittings will ensure a constant flow of work for plumbers, plasterers, and carpet fitters.

Every cloud has a silver lining!

Most things you buy these days just about make it out of the warranty period - built in obsolescence is a fine art!
 
poor materials can make you look like a bad tradesman, especially stuff like traps,wastes, taps etc...... any leak is your fault even tho your having to fit stuff that struggles to hold water on a good day.

If you had the choice you would buy a float valve with a brass body and or thread, but you normally have to deal with the poor quality plastic one that came with the cistern. Maybe its our own fault as trademen and a country for not demanding better? money talks tho.
 
poor materials can make you look like a bad tradesman, especially stuff like traps,wastes, taps etc...... any leak is your fault even tho your having to fit stuff that struggles to hold water on a good day.

If you had the choice you would buy a float valve with a brass body and or thread, but you normally have to deal with the poor quality plastic one that came with the cistern. Maybe its our own fault as trademen and a country for not demanding better? money talks tho.

Yes, agree that using cheap tat may be bad for the individual reputation, but then it does mean work for others, so good for the industry in general.

The life-span of this rubbish has to be carefully planned and based on the average time it takes for a customer to lose a receipt/invoice, and completely forget a name and telephone number - six weeks should cover it for most people.

China is now the workshop of the world, India is the scrap yard, and we in the West keep the system going by consuming copious amounts of junk!

So don't spoil things Mr Wheating, do your bit for world trade!
 
You can buy 1/2" brass backnuts for taps and stuff and they have scrimped on the brass so much that a box spanner of correct size wont work. Just spins around the nut
 
You can buy 1/2" brass backnuts for taps and stuff and they have scrimped on the brass so much that a box spanner of correct size wont work. Just spins around the nut

I think they're all metric in China - if you buy a 1/2" Chinese box spanner it will probably fit.
 
I dont want to buy a chinese box spanner. My rothenberger box spanner should work just fine in a perfect world. As we all know, its not a perfect world
 
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