Having spent a fair amount of time hanging about the EarthCruiser USA operation during the last 10.5 years (I’ve owned two of the Fuso-based EXPs and I like the facility and all of the people involved) several things come to mind:
1. I never saw anyone living a lifestyle that could even remotely support the idea of “…taking the $$$ and running.”
2. I think that the increases in prices represent an increase in costs (facilities, materials, components, labor, etc.) and features (lithium-based energy storage versus AGM, true low-range capable 4x4 system versus the original Fuso 4x4 offering, etc). Most of the “feature creep” evolved as a direct response to requests by actual and potential customers.
3. I think there is an important distinction between what I can afford to pay for something and what that something costs to develop, produce and offer for sale. The fact that I can’t afford something does not mean that it is over-priced or that someone is making an unfair profit. It simply means I can’t or don’t want to spend that amount of money.
4. I have no idea why EC USA is closing. But I’m very sad to see it happen.
Howard Snell
1. I never saw anyone living a lifestyle that could even remotely support the idea of “…taking the $$$ and running.”
2. I think that the increases in prices represent an increase in costs (facilities, materials, components, labor, etc.) and features (lithium-based energy storage versus AGM, true low-range capable 4x4 system versus the original Fuso 4x4 offering, etc). Most of the “feature creep” evolved as a direct response to requests by actual and potential customers.
3. I think there is an important distinction between what I can afford to pay for something and what that something costs to develop, produce and offer for sale. The fact that I can’t afford something does not mean that it is over-priced or that someone is making an unfair profit. It simply means I can’t or don’t want to spend that amount of money.
4. I have no idea why EC USA is closing. But I’m very sad to see it happen.
Howard Snell