Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > Any new snowblowers out for 2012
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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letitsnow
Joined: Sep 25, 2011
Points: 6
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Re: Any new snowblowers out for 2012
Reply #8 Sep 25, 2011 11:28 pm |
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it states 4 cycle R*Tek and is consitent with a rumor I heard through a Toro dealer last week. He said that his shipments of the 726 and 826 will no longer have the briggs, but a toro labeled engine from china. he didnt know any other details and did not state R*tek, but now after finding the 926 oxe, it seems obvious that something is going on with the new Toro's. I havent seen any official announcement from Toro or briggs. I am very curious. wondering if toro finally caved to the big box stores and is trying to compete with the price point of the lower quality machines (MTD).
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letitsnow
Joined: Sep 25, 2011
Points: 6
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Re: Any new snowblowers out for 2012
Reply #11 Sep 27, 2011 12:39 am |
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If you go to the toro website and search model numbers, they show a few new models for 2012 that have a "Toro" engine. This includes the 926 OXE (38661). When you look up the warranty info for the model, it list Briggs for the warranty coverage. Not sure what to make of it. It doesnt say R*Tek anywhere. But it says Toro for the engine opposed to the 726 and 826 which say Briggs. Does anyone have a theory on this? Why would they stop listing briggs as the mfr?
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aa335
Joined: Nov 29, 2008
Points: 2434
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Re: Any new snowblowers out for 2012
Reply #12 Sep 27, 2011 10:58 am |
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If you go to the toro website and search model numbers, they show a few new models for 2012 that have a "Toro" engine. This includes the 926 OXE (38661). When you look up the warranty info for the model, it list Briggs for the warranty coverage. Not sure what to make of it. It doesnt say R*Tek anywhere. But it says Toro for the engine opposed to the 726 and 826 which say Briggs. Does anyone have a theory on this? Why would they stop listing briggs as the mfr? Yes, I found it on their website, on support pages rather than on their snowblower line up though. My theory is since China makes engines for many companies, why not source it directly from the manufacturer rather than branded Briggs equivalent, especially if you got the volume buy with competitive pricing. Skip the middle man unless the buyer has a warm and fuzzy confidence having a Briggs sticker on their engine. But then again, if Briggs is making snowblowers too, why slap their label on your snowblower unless they pay you.
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letitsnow
Joined: Sep 25, 2011
Points: 6
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Re: Any new snowblowers out for 2012
Reply #13 Sep 27, 2011 1:15 pm |
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If Briggs did indeed mfr the new Toro engine, and it is being branded as Toro opposed to Briggs, my guess is that the quality standard/quality requirement for the mfr of the engine is lower (cheaper components, more defects allowable per X number of engines, etc) than the Briggs quality level, so rather than potentially tarnish the Briggs name with a sub-standard engine, they agreed to make this engine specifically for Toro with the Toro label. In the end, Toro probably decided that the new "Toro" engine is still a significant upgrade over the competition (MTD chinese engines), that it is a small risk for them and a potential huge upside in that they can sell the snowblower for a more competitve price at the big box stores thereby increasing market share. A win- win for everyone except the guy who can't start his Toro in the middle of a blizzard. And to add to that, and maybe this is a bit of a stretch, BUT, realizing that their snowblowers are averaging a lifespan of 16yrs and MTD is 8yrs (arbitrary numbers), they wouldnt mind dropping the lifespan to around 10-12 in order to sell more "replacement" machines to the Toro faithful.
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longboat
Joined: Feb 11, 2009
Points: 103
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Re: Any new snowblowers out for 2012
Reply #15 Sep 28, 2011 9:43 am |
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Yes, I found it on their website, on support pages rather than on their snowblower line up though.
My theory is since China makes engines for many companies, why not source it directly from the manufacturer rather than branded Briggs equivalent, especially if you got the volume buy with competitive pricing. Skip the middle man unless the buyer has a warm and fuzzy confidence having a Briggs sticker on their engine. But then again, if Briggs is making snowblowers too, why slap their label on your snowblower unless they pay you.
Do you guys ever watch the show "How It's Made"? The monologue is rather dry, but the show gives a fresh perspective on manufacturing. Now, remember when VCRs were very popular and millions were being sold every year, under hundreds of different brand names? There were like four factories in the world manufacturing all of these VCRs. If you're a retailer, all you have to do is purchase X number of products from a manufacturer to be able to put your name on them (my uncle was an electronics dealer, so I learned this at an early age). The mfr. doesn't care so much whether their name is on it, they get to move more product which keeps their factories running at capacity which makes for a higher profit margin in the end. If you've ever run a construction company, you know that downtime is more expensive than uptime, because your equipment is not working and turning a profit.
All this is to say that there are maybe a half-dozen major snowblower manufacturers in the world, and maybe two or three major engine manufacturers that build engines specifically for winter use (snowblowing). MTD is likely the largest snowblower manufacturer and their machines are sold under a half-dozen or more name brands (Craftsman, Cub Cadet, White, Bolens, Troybilt, etc.). Now, when these machines (or engines) are built in the factories, they typically are not continuously running down a conveyor belt with workers adding parts along the assembly line. Rather, they are built in batches (or runs, designated by serial numbers), mostly by robots, with a few human workers in there to add parts that would be too costly to program robots to do, and to do quality control / quality assurance. As each batch gets run, they can alter the components, such as types of metal, thickness of metal, metal vs. plastic, cast vs. forged, etc. Therefore, a single factory can manufacture low-quality units as well as high-quality units depending on the components they use. They can adjust their manufacturing components and end-products to meet the specifications of a large retailer, hence the minor differences in otherwise identical machines. All of the rest is marketing...
This message was modified Sep 28, 2011 by longboat
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