Is it true that Cervelo's are being made in China?
Not my Colnago C64 Dick, 2022. Handmade in Italy. Forza Italia!!Just like everyone else
Trek, Colnago, Specialized, Bianchi etc.
http://www.canadianbusiness.com/managing/strategy/article.jsp?content=20060109_154920_3740
Just like everyone else
Trek, Colnago, Specialized, Bianchi etc.
http://www.canadianbusiness.com/managing/strategy/article.jsp?content=20060109_154920_3740
Most Trek carbon frames are still made stateside, though a good amount of their aluminum production has gone elsewhere.Rollo Tommassi said:Trek, Colnago, Specialized, Bianchi etc.
http://www.canadianbusiness.com/managing/strategy/article.jsp?content=20060109_154920_3740
I've read (I think here) that Aluminum Cervelo's are made in Taiwan, but carbon is made in China.kdub said:I think Cervelo is made in Taiwan.
The Alpha Q GS10 for is made in China.
I think most people know Cervelo are not an european brand, at least any semi informed customer would know. fact of the matter is, it doesn't matter where it's made as long as its as good as you expect and pay for it. if you are worried about a bunch of asian people working over your bike than that is another problem of yours that needs attention... ps don't trust your railway system either...Rubber Lizard said:Most Trek carbon frames are still made stateside, though a good amount of their aluminum production has gone elsewhere.
Cervelos have always been made in China. In fact, a great deal of high end carbon bikes are made in China, Others are made in Taiwan. Very few carbon fiber bicycles come out of Italy or anywhere else. The bicycle industry is very good at deceiving customers where the product is actually made. Cervelo's are a Canadian company that makes their bikes in China but most consumers believe they are a european company that makes bikes in Europe. Even Campagnolo who everyone loves because its Italian is mostly made in Romania now.
Get over it.
Where did you think they were being manufactured???advan said:Is it true that Cervelo's are being made in China?
My dad is an architect who specializes in high end retail stores, Rodeo Drive, Beverly Hills, South Coast Plaza etc.., and has done some outlet stores. If you don't know many luxury high end fashion/bag/shoe companies outlet products are made specifically for the outlets ie: not the same as their regular retail stores. What is not left over stock is made specifically in cheaper factories out of lesser materials. Sometimes the designs are not exactly the same either, ranges from very subtle to non existant in the non outlet retailer. Some of those stores are actually owned by a licensee and the actually brand is only making a percentage.I was at a Coach outlet store in Buffalo New York the past weekend. They were so busy they were opening boxes every 30 mins to refill the shelves. They even had the boxes piled outside in the main store and not in the back. Low and behold... the boxes had "MADE IN CHINA" printed on them. So for all the ladies out there your 400 dollar purse came from the same factory that made the knock off ones you can get on the streets for 40 bucks.
I've been on Asian bikes since the late '70s. I've had two serious problems. I wish my American made cars were as good. I do seriously question the wisdom of pumping money and technology into a Chinese totalitarian system, though. I know both Democrats and Republicans claim it will bring about a democratic transition, but I can't help but think they're main goal is to maintain the status quo by drugging a restless population with cheap consumer goods at home. That said, Chinese goods are so ubiquitous that they're difficult to avoid, and sometimes impossible ('tis the season- try finding non-Chinese made Christmas decorations- which is interesting when you realize you do hard time in a Chinese labor camp for holding private Bible study meetings instead of going to a state run church, and I can fully understand why Chinese believers wouldn't want to go to a church run my avowed atheists. Neither our Bible carrying former president, nor our Bible thumping current president, seem to mind all that much as long as the goods keep flowing in). I'd much prefer to pay a little more for a frame made in Taiwan, or have some forward thinking company like Cervelo explore exporting technology to other places they can get cheap labor and make a real change- like Africa, the Middle East, Eastern Europe, and Central America, or maybe using robotics and building a plant at home in Canada- employing fewer people, but paying them more. If you can make the economics work to build cars in North America you should be able to build bikes here. I'll step of my soapbox now.OneGear said:I think most people know Cervelo are not an european brand, at least any semi informed customer would know. fact of the matter is, it doesn't matter where it's made as long as its as good as you expect and pay for it. if you are worried about a bunch of asian people working over your bike than that is another problem of yours that needs attention... ps don't trust your railway system either...
If you browse Cervelo's site they admit to using Chinese/Taiwanese factories quite freely, and aside from the R2.5 i don't think there have been that many problems with the manufacturing side of the business.
I thought they were made in Taiwan, honestly. Not China.toomanybikes said:Where did you think they were being manufactured???
We're comparing high end frames. The R3 and Carbon Soloist -- expensive frames -- are handmade in China. The high-end Trek, Colnago, Specialized and Bianchis are handmade in the USA or Italy -- not China.Rollo Tommassi said:Trek, Colnago, Specialized, Bianchi etc.
China, bro.FondriestFan said:I thought they were made in Taiwan, honestly. Not China.
My sentiments exactly.fornaca68 said:To all those that think made in China is no biggie, then why doesn't Cervelo stamp "HANDMADE IN CHINA" along the seatstays? Answer: because it isn't good for sales. I recently was deciding between a Cervelo Carbon Soloist SL and another bike made in the USA (Cannondale if you're curious). The prices were roughly the same -- not cheap in either case. I was leaning toward the Cervelo thinking it was made in Canada. Then I asked the LBS guy straight up: "Is the frame made in Canada?" "No," he replied. "It's made in China." There is NFW I'm paying top-dollar for a two-pound frame made in China. That's my personal opinion, disagree all you want, but for the cost of labor in China being a pittance compared to US labor costs, Cervelo shouldn't be charging what they charge for their high-end frames manufactured in the country that is notorious for garbage quality in manufactured products. Just the last few months, we've had poisoned pets from bad pet food, bad toothpaste, and lead-based paint in Thomas the Train toys -- courtesy of Chinese contractors trying to cut costs. So Cervelo expects me to pay $5K and up for a Carbon Soloist SL bike made in China?? Sorry. NFW.
fornaca68 said:To all those that think made in China is no biggie, then why doesn't Cervelo stamp "HANDMADE IN CHINA" along the seatstays? Answer: because it isn't good for sales. I recently was deciding between a Cervelo Carbon Soloist SL and another bike made in the USA (Cannondale if you're curious). The prices were roughly the same -- not cheap in either case. I was leaning toward the Cervelo thinking it was made in Canada. Then I asked the LBS guy straight up: "Is the frame made in Canada?" "No," he replied. "It's made in China." There is NFW I'm paying top-dollar for a two-pound frame made in China. That's my personal opinion, disagree all you want, but for the cost of labor in China being a pittance compared to US labor costs, Cervelo shouldn't be charging what they charge for their high-end frames manufactured in the country that is notorious for garbage quality in manufactured products. Just the last few months, we've had poisoned pets from bad pet food, bad toothpaste, and lead-based paint in Thomas the Train toys -- courtesy of
Chinese contractors trying to cut costs. So Cervelo expects me to pay $5K and up for a Carbon Soloist SL bike made in China?? Sorry. NFW.
Real Answer: the uninformed customer cares too much about where something is made, or they are worried about little foreign men working on their toys, which somehow cheapens it when this is the sort of thing that western economy has been based on for the last 150 years. I'd hate to see how these people will be living when they try to boycott all Chinese-made goods in the coming years. either they'll be seriously in debt but living in luxury, or eating humble pie but still oblivious to the facts.fornaca68 said:To all those that think made in China is no biggie, then why doesn't Cervelo stamp "HANDMADE IN CHINA" along the seatstays? Answer: because it isn't good for sales.
michael desimone said:sorry to come in so late hope u dont mind
l dont care where its made provided the quality is fine for the cost
that said l hope those companies that built their reputations off the sweat of loyal hard working people in their countries of origin have secured the jobs of those that helped build that reputation
it would be immoral that for profit, the company out sourced, charged the same price and then said they would not have been competitive if they had not done so even though they
could have made a profit while making at home not as big granted
OneGear said:Buddy... you're the one cutting costs. You complain and don't buy goods because you think things are too expensive. The American/Canadian company needs your sales so they have to meet your demands, = cut costs. they tell the Chinese contractors -> cut costs or you lose your business. Chinese contractors cut costs to survive, Americans/Canadians don't do any QA, they just want to make the sales...= dead kids and a not so friendly Thomas the Train. ****, i didn't know you ingest a Cervelo frame... in that case, I'm ditching my Cervelo as well! To blame the Chinese manufacturers and hold the American/Canadian companies as innocents is just plain ignorance. If you sourced out a product with your brand on it, wouldn't you go over there and ensure everything is tip top and worthy of having your sticker on it? Not to mention avoid lawsuits? Any consumer-caring company would. Basic economics.
Chinese products were/are garbage because everyone goes there looking to pay less for the same quality of good. well, sorry, you should know you can't have the best of all worlds... cheap, high quality, service, choose two, cuz 'NFW' you'll have all three. Not to mention the standard of living is raising in china and they can't afford to be financially raped like in the early 90's anymore.. people need more money to survive, and that means wages going up and labour not being as cheap as dirt as Americans are used to exploiting. I presume in the next decade or so American/First World corps will just move onto the next mass population cheap labour source they can find... Hopefully one day they find Africa so they finally get a piece of the pie.
Cervelo shouldn't be charging what they do? Yeah, probably not... but by that strain of thought nothing should cost what it costs, but rather we should buy at cost... lets implement that system and see what happens... wait a minute.. sounds like Socialism... thats going to be real popular with you guys... but buyers dictate the market price... if nobody bought at that price than they wouldn't be charging that price woudl they? market price is whatever the buyers are willing to pay... R&D costs money too you know...not to mention wages and overhead costs for a company the size of Cervelo... who have probably less than 100 people working in engineering and support. Economies of Scale my friend.
I'm sorry, please compare the rides of the top end Chinese Made bikes vs the American Made bikes. Please compare performance, which is what really matters. The difference is virtually marginal. If there is a noticeable difference, you would explain it as a design superiority right? That is why you pay extra money for the frame. If that frame is cervelo, please stop moaning, you are now paying for performance. If that frame is American, you are paying for American superiority :mad2: right??
Real Answer: the uninformed customer cares too much about where something is made, or they are worried about little foreign men working on their toys, which somehow cheapens it when this is the sort of thing that western economy has been based on for the last 150 years. I'd hate to see how these people will be living when they try to boycott all Chinese-made goods in the coming years. either they'll be seriously in debt but living in luxury, or eating humble pie but still oblivious to the facts.
I just happen to disagree, I know this will all be ignored and you'll go on happy with your Cannondale, I would probably be too, but I just had to lay it out there. I'm not even going to go into the religion debate.. after 9/11 its almost the same thing here... Think about it.
If it rides nice and you got the dough, buy it. Ability, not Pedigree.
After reading that (admittedly, not all of it -- you had me skim past much of the rhetorical points :incazzato: ), you had my head spinning. But your basic point is that a Chinese-made Cervelo frame (i) does not compromise frame quality and (ii) carries a justifiable pricetag, even with the use of cost-efficient Chinese labor. I respect your opinion, I just disagree, particularly on the pricetag issue. Some on this board will agree with you, while others will not.OneGear said:Buddy... you're the one cutting costs. You complain and don't buy goods because you think things are too expensive. The American/Canadian company needs your sales so they have to meet your demands, = cut costs. they tell the Chinese contractors -> cut costs or you lose your business. Chinese contractors cut costs to survive, Americans/Canadians don't do any QA, they just want to make the sales...= dead kids and a not so friendly Thomas the Train. ****, i didn't know you ingest a Cervelo frame... in that case, I'm ditching my Cervelo as well! To blame the Chinese manufacturers and hold the American/Canadian companies as innocents is just plain ignorance. If you sourced out a product with your brand on it, wouldn't you go over there and ensure everything is tip top and worthy of having your sticker on it? Not to mention avoid lawsuits? Any consumer-caring company would. Basic economics.
Chinese products were/are garbage because everyone goes there looking to pay less for the same quality of good. well, sorry, you should know you can't have the best of all worlds... cheap, high quality, service, choose two, cuz 'NFW' you'll have all three. Not to mention the standard of living is raising in china and they can't afford to be financially raped like in the early 90's anymore.. people need more money to survive, and that means wages going up and labour not being as cheap as dirt as Americans are used to exploiting. I presume in the next decade or so American/First World corps will just move onto the next mass population cheap labour source they can find... Hopefully one day they find Africa so they finally get a piece of the pie.
Cervelo shouldn't be charging what they do? Yeah, probably not... but by that strain of thought nothing should cost what it costs, but rather we should buy at cost... lets implement that system and see what happens... wait a minute.. sounds like Socialism... thats going to be real popular with you guys... but buyers dictate the market price... if nobody bought at that price than they wouldn't be charging that price woudl they? market price is whatever the buyers are willing to pay... R&D costs money too you know...not to mention wages and overhead costs for a company the size of Cervelo... who have probably less than 100 people working in engineering and support. Economies of Scale my friend.
I'm sorry, please compare the rides of the top end Chinese Made bikes vs the American Made bikes. Please compare performance, which is what really matters. The difference is virtually marginal. If there is a noticeable differe:crazy: nce, you would explain it as a design superiority right? That is why you pay extra money for the frame. If that frame is cervelo, please stop moaning, you are now paying for performance. If that frame is American, you are paying for American superiority :mad2: right??
Real Answer: the uninformed customer cares too much about where something is made, or they are worried about little foreign men working on their toys, which somehow cheapens it when this is the sort of thing that western economy has been based on for the last 150 years. I'd hate to see how these people will be living when they try to boycott all Chinese-made goods in the coming years. either they'll be seriously in debt but living in luxury, or eating humble pie but still oblivious to the facts.
I just happen to disagree, I know this will all be ignored and you'll go on happy with your Cannondale, I would probably be too, but I just had to lay it out there. I'm not even going to go into the religion debate.. after 9/11 its almost the same thing here... Think about it.
If it rides nice and you got the dough, buy it. Ability, not Pedigree.