Originally Posted by
NJse-r No business ethics or consideration for anything but helping themselves.
Sounds much like capitalism, a very American concept, no?
In the end, it's the market forces that have created and justified the existence of companies that make knockoffs. Most of the "original" power adders have a price tag that's just too high for the average enthusiast to afford. To sound like an economist, the prices that some of these companies demand are excessively above the supply/demand equilibrium. These companies are relying on selling few items but for a high markup instead of selling thousands of them for a low markup. They need to learn something from the likes of Walmart to figure out what goes on in the mind of the people they're trying to sell stuff to. Yes, I get it, Walmart is much bigger, but if HKS/Greddy/AMS/Mazworx/whoever really wants to make a profit, they need to see profitability from a long-term perspective instead of trying to immediately recoup R&D and production costs.
And let's see this from a consumer perspective as well. If I had bought brand-new items from HKS, Greddy or whoever else for my EVO, I would have spent well over $15,000. By going used and even knockoffs for non-crucial parts, I ended up spending $4,000. Now, if you were an average consumer looking to get the best bang for your buck, tell me why you'd rather spend the extra $11,000 when you could get the same reliability out of either used originals or knockoffs that work?
More of the arguments seem emotionally charged and not focused on realizing that regardless of what you think, people are not spend-thrift and would rather build their wealth than give it away to an entity that has overpriced a commodity it is trying to sell. It's Economics 101, literally.