jwgreen6
New member
- Dec 26, 2010
- 222
- 0
Re: Rupes aquires Cyclo Toolmakers
The factory in Longmont is not that large. The entire shop takes up 3 strip-mall spaces. When I took a tour of the shop last year, the production line was run by 1 person and had 3-4 people in the office. Efficient, at best.
A simliar merger happened 5 years ago between the company that owned Midas Consoles (the true gold-standard in high-end live audio consoles) and Behringer, a leader in "affordable" audio electronics. Many thought Midas would vanish into the world of profit-taking but it turns out the production standards Behringer established actually made Midas a better product. Some of the unique features Midas offered found its way into the Behringer line.
What will transpire between Rupes and Cyclo? Only time (and money) will tell.
I already agreed, polishers were super duper niche (see my airplane-polishing joke above) here. I can't imagine the factory in Longmont is huge, but it's safe to say that it gives Rupes an established beachhead here for expansion, and not just the automotive polisher line.
The factory in Longmont is not that large. The entire shop takes up 3 strip-mall spaces. When I took a tour of the shop last year, the production line was run by 1 person and had 3-4 people in the office. Efficient, at best.
Similar thing just happened in the music instrument world too. "Wow" was my reaction to both.
A simliar merger happened 5 years ago between the company that owned Midas Consoles (the true gold-standard in high-end live audio consoles) and Behringer, a leader in "affordable" audio electronics. Many thought Midas would vanish into the world of profit-taking but it turns out the production standards Behringer established actually made Midas a better product. Some of the unique features Midas offered found its way into the Behringer line.
What will transpire between Rupes and Cyclo? Only time (and money) will tell.