On Saturday, April 13, 2013 5:37:03 AM UTC-7, Matthew J wrote:
>
> Welcome development especially so if quality approaches that of its 
> parent.  If they bring back the Winner Pro freewheel I would take special 
> note.  Wonderifthese are made inJapan or sub-contracted out.


Most of the classic Japanese names no longer have any factories. The old 
tooling is long-gone. None of the skilled workers remain. For example, 
Dia-Compe is little more than a warehouse in Taiwan. The new SunXCD parts 
are sub-contracted out, mostly to Taiwan, it appears. It's great that some 
of the old names are involved, but it remains to be seen what they can 
achieve. (Remember that Mr. Kawai is in his 90s.)

There are small shops in Japan that never did close down, like Nitto and 
Honjo. They still make their own products the old way.

Regarding freewheels, Compass Bicycles has looked into bringing back true 
high-quality freewheels, but it's very difficult. First, there isn't 
anybody with the know-how any longer of how to make these, and second, 
freewheels have huge economies of scale. There are many different small 
parts, which means huge tooling costs. The actual production costs once you 
have the tooling are very small. So if you sell 100,000 freewheels a year, 
you can offer them at a decent price. But if you sell 1000, the price goes 
up tremendously.

Jan Heine
Compass Bicycles Ltd.
http://www.compasscycle.com

Follow our blog at http://janheine.wordpress.com/

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