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CantonG

08/05/15 10:52 AM

#74340 RE: iateclube #74339

Apple runs the show here, what's bad for Apple is reflected on Lqmt. Probably more psychological than anything else. But I did add it could be good for Lqmt in the end.

CantonG

08/05/15 11:00 AM

#74341 RE: iateclube #74339

Apple is up a bit today, Lqmt is up a bit today, doesn't always happen that way but if you see Apple go way, way down, Lqmt most likely will go down with it.

Watts Watt

08/05/15 11:03 AM

#74343 RE: iateclube #74339

I totally agree.

Apple's PPS movements are totally irrelevant to the future of LQMT knife sales, which, for the time being, seem to have peaked. Not even the first 300 have been sold.

Which brings to life an old question I had.

Just exactly what popped out of the mold?

If I were in charge of the LQMT website, I would have shown the whole process from molding the two knife half parts, popping them out, de-spruing, de-gating, etc. and show the FINAL PRODUCT going out the doors of the RSM machine shop to Miltner-Adams.

Obviously, the closer the knife halves are to being ready for assembly, the better it is for LQMT to make claims about the knife being ASSEMBLY READY.

Second, Why do the knives not come out with a sharp edge which was the original claim of being netcast and ready to go to work.

Just how many hours of "finishing" (the whole reason Kang set up a China plant for the Korea operation - to finish what die casting could not accomplish, and, AT GREAT EXPENSE) were required to bring each knife half up to grade for assembly and up to grade for cutting....

These are the nitty gritty details that beg to be answered, for in the answers lie the reason for the LQMT Engel process being acceptable or not for the US market, which is a whole year and one half ahead of the European market.

Why doesn't the Company address these manufacturing issues DIRECTLY, like they have each and every other question about anything?