fire_diver
Contributor
awap:When there is not enough grass for all the cattle, you have to get rid of some so the rest can survive.
LOL spoken like a true Texan!
FD
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awap:When there is not enough grass for all the cattle, you have to get rid of some so the rest can survive.
fire_diver:LOL spoken like a true Texan! FD
DIR-Atlanta:So is price fixing, but you never hear the industry types complaining about that.
ams511:On thing the maufacturers are not addressing is the barriers of entry into scuba diving. A potential diver may be turned off to diving because it is too expensive. She walks into a store and finds out to be outfitted in equipment it costs $1,500 and decides it is too expensive or decides she would rather rent than buy gear for her Caribbean vacation each year. The LDS loses this potential sale because of high prices. As Mike mentioned in a prior post, most students do not buy a complete setup. Perhaps they would if the price was more reasonable. I met many people who were interested in diving but always said it is too expensive and never decided to get certified. The dive industry is more interested in protecting their profit margins than diving. There was a recent thread were PADI was requiring divers in certain locations to present some sort of sticker from their course pack in order to complete the certification. I am sure they have some excuse for it but we all know the real reason is to sell more course packs and kill the used book market.
barebones:Leisure pro gets the grey market stuff from overseas. The regulators are made in Europe.
friscuba:Shops in most smaller markets would die if their retail sales tumble. If the only way to get dive equipment was online, the service portion of diving would also dry up in most parts of the nation and the hobby would suffer and shrink. Aqualung probably realizes this.
ams511:On thing the maufacturers are not addressing is the barriers of entry into scuba diving. A potential diver may be turned off to diving because it is too expensive. She walks into a store and finds out to be outfitted in equipment it costs $1,500 and decides it is too expensive or decides she would rather rent than buy gear for her Caribbean vacation each year. The LDS loses this potential sale because of high prices. As Mike mentioned in a prior post, most students do not buy a complete setup. Perhaps they would if the price was more reasonable. I met many people who were interested in diving but always said it is too expensive and never decided to get certified. The dive industry is more interested in protecting their profit margins than diving. There was a recent thread were PADI was requiring divers in certain locations to present some sort of sticker from their course pack in order to complete the certification. I am sure they have some excuse for it but we all know the real reason is to sell more course packs and kill the used book market.
I do not view the policies as being "well within the law" - more like "just legal enough to keep them out of trouble". They may follow the letter of the law, but they certainly violate the spirit, and the end result is the same as if they were engaging in price fixing.DIR-Atlanta:So is price fixing, but you never hear the industry types complaining about that.barebones:You can bet the lawyers at Aqua Lung and Scubapro are keeping their policies well within the law. Don't believe me --- go try to find an attorney to head a class action suit against them on contingency.![]()
MikeFerrara:One would think that if the local market for equipment goes down (which it has) and if there is still a market for local training, that training prices would go up to make up the difference. You just go from a large markup on equipment and small markup on training to a reasonable markup on both. I like that better than having to pay for someone's open water class when I buy a reg.
The shops are hanging on still trying to use loss leader classes to sell equipment. It's working too, it's just that they're selling it for LP. Aqualung still gets their cut though.