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Geostorm98 |
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Joined: September 2011 Posts: 402 Location: New Hartford CT | There is a 2 page article on the latest and greatest at the New Hartford CT factory in the 6/10/12 Sunday Waterbury Republican American. Here is a teaser link; if you want the entire article you will need to pay $.75 or buy the paper. I'm a dinosaur who actually still subscribes and reads the paper. http://www.rep-am.com/entertainment/arts/647539.txt | ||
aaronharmon |
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Joined: October 2009 Posts: 133 Location: Ohio | Cool thanks | ||
moody, p.i. |
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Joined: March 2002 Posts: 15664 Location: SoCal | And with the exception of a uke, not an Ovation or Adamas in sight.... | ||
Puppetman |
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Joined: August 2011 Posts: 187 Location: Florence,SC | Looks like it might be a mandolin .... How can you have a photo tour of the KMC plant and not even see one Ovation lurking in the background? | ||
stellarjim |
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Joined: August 2003 Posts: 888 Location: Louisville, OH 44641 | Does anyone know which Ovation models are still made in New Hartford? | ||
Patch |
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Joined: May 2006 Posts: 4226 Location: Steeler Nation, Hudson Valley Contingent | I saw several at the factory last week; most were not yet recognizable, but there were some Adamii, a Dimeolla or two, a couple of rebuilds (neither of which were mine ), and a few others. All told, there were about a dozen within arms' reach of the workbenches I walked by. There were probably others at various stages of construction elsewhere I would think. | ||
stellarjim |
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Joined: August 2003 Posts: 888 Location: Louisville, OH 44641 | But my question is this: If I ordered an Elite, for example....would it be built in New Hartford?....or China?...or Korea? I'm not clear on this anymore. What about a Balladeer or a Legend or an Adamas? I used to think of Applause as the Chinese version, Celebrity as the Korean models and Ovation as the US models. But I don't think it's that simple anymore after the sale to Fender. | ||
moody, p.i. |
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Joined: March 2002 Posts: 15664 Location: SoCal | Unless it's an Adamas or a custom order, it would be built overseas.... | ||
jay |
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Joined: January 2009 Posts: 1249 Location: Texas | "But I don't think it's that simple anymore after the sale to Fender." I bet you would be surprised how simple it may be. My thinking is, it comes down to the bottom line. Fender has moved most of the O line production out (imo) to keep Ovation a viable company. I would guess that the margins were just too slim on the USA Ovation line to stay domestic. Patch has shown that Ovation can still make a killer guitar, but the cost falls outside the realm of normal retail. Although dated...I believe these demographics illustrate the trend...the trend to over seas production U.S. Guitar Sales Acoustic Guitars Electric Guitars Unit Volume 2002 969,103 $477,885,000 $538 SOURCE: Music Trades 2003
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Standingovation |
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Joined: June 2002 Posts: 6197 Location: Phoenix AZ | Just assume ALL ovations are built overseas, and that way you won't be disappointed. If it turns out you get a USA made one, consider it a bonus. | ||
ksdaddy |
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Joined: April 2003 Posts: 608 Location: Caribou, ME | "But I don't think it's that simple anymore after the sale to Fender." Nothing is ever simple with Fender. When I was in my formative years, Fender meant something. Yes, that was during the CBS years and the quality was all over the place and they did some dumb things (hindsight being 20/20 and all) but at least you knew what you were buying. Owning a Fender meant you had "arrived". At least in my mind. Now the name means nothing. Fender will put their name on anything, anytime, anywhere, if they think they can sell it, and then the sales staff lies about where it's made. It's watered down. Martin has done the same thing with their "X" series. Gibson almost did it when they bought Garrison and made a handful of mid priced Canadian made Gibsons. Thank God that chapter is done with. Not being xenophobic here. I've got guitars made all over the world. I just identify with the brand names. When I see a Hagstrom made in China I feel ill. It just ain't right. | ||
FlySig |
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Joined: October 2005 Posts: 4044 Location: Utah | "My thinking is, it comes down to the bottom line. Fender has moved most of the O line production out (imo) to keep Ovation a viable company. I would guess that the margins were just too slim on the USA Ovation line to stay domestic. " Therein lies the emotional conflict for us Ovation and Adamas lovers. We appreciate the products, we admire the workmanship, and we enjoy the technological innovation. edited to add: I am thankful for the great USA built guitars I was able to buy from Ovation, Adamas, and Hamer at great prices. Too bad I didn't recognize that those prices were unreasonably cheap or that the prices would rise. Otherwise I would have found a way to buy some more. Edited by FlySig 2012-06-11 8:10 AM | ||
jay |
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Joined: January 2009 Posts: 1249 Location: Texas | Hey Fly.... "all about profit" "nothing about...slim profit margins" I honestly think we are on the same page...but if not, that is cool. I am pretty sure Fender has yet to go through their IPO. They have quite a bit of debt. I think a private equity firm owns almost half of the company and their distributor in Japan owns a sizable chunk also. I did read an article last month that said Guitar Center was Fenders biggest customer...and correlated the fact that Moodys (not Paul) had downgraded GC to junk status. Maybe it was Paul. | ||
Patch |
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Joined: May 2006 Posts: 4226 Location: Steeler Nation, Hudson Valley Contingent | stellarjim - 2012-06-10 8:52 PM But my question is this: If I ordered an Elite, for example....would it be built in New Hartford?....or China?...or Korea? I'm not clear on this anymore. What about a Balladeer or a Legend or an Adamas? I used to think of Applause as the Chinese version, Celebrity as the Korean models and Ovation as the US models. But I don't think it's that simple anymore after the sale to Fender. The only spec wood-top that I'm aware of that is not built overseas is the Al Dimeola. Beyond that Jim, you have to custom order a USA-build, regardless of the model. I have no idea what the cost would be to, say, go through a local shop or someone like Al; as it comes down to the specs on the order form. You can make it as fancy or as plain as you (or your budget) like. I would hazard to say however, that the cost would be more in line with other American guitars now. If someone wants a professional grade instrument, it is going to be in the same price range as a professional level Guild, Martin, Taylor, Takamine, etc. Not that USA Ovations aren't worth the money, but as has been noted countless times before around here, we got spoiled by the low prices Ovations commanded recently. Remember a few years back when they began closing out the American models, and you could buy a new USA Elite for well under $1K? Well is it a big surprise that LOTS of people now believe that's all Ovations are worth? I know better, and so do most of us, but that doesn't make the modern pricing any easier to pallette. To me, they are worth it, but to the rest of the music world? Well.....a long time ago a new fan website was launched with the opening line: "Ovation Guitars really don't get the respect they deserve!" That statement is every bit as true now as it was then.
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stellarjim |
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Joined: August 2003 Posts: 888 Location: Louisville, OH 44641 | I understand the bean counters always argue for going overseas because it reduces your costs substantially. But how many Chinese model guitars does Ovation need? I guess the answer is "all of them". I work for a manufacturing company in OH. In strategic planning, we have been discussing that nearly all the jobs going overseas, are already there. That's because the Chinese dollar (yuan) is increasing in value. And Chinese labor costs are rising substantially. And shipping guitars 10,000 miles is getting more expensive. Several manufacturers are starting to re-shore work from China to the US. The bottom line is this. Are the overseas costs still lower than domestic costs?...yes. But I seriously doubt off-shoring all the Ovation models will be a successful long term strategy. Fender's move is really too late. And I'm glad I bought my American Ovations and Adamas models when I did. | ||
javaman |
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Joined: January 2007 Posts: 137 Location: Massachusetts | Wouldn't it b nice if the dedicated Ovation workers did what the Harley Davidson workers did with the AMC Corporation. | ||
jay |
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Joined: January 2009 Posts: 1249 Location: Texas | AMF? | ||
Standingovation |
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Joined: June 2002 Posts: 6197 Location: Phoenix AZ | The problem is that over the last 5 or so years Ovation made numerous attempts to revive the USA guitars within a very competitive market and each and every time the buyng public spoke with their wallets and said WE ARE NOT INTERESTED - The Traditional Series - Shiny Bowl Reissues - Adamas Custom Shop - Glen Campbell Artist Reissues - Glen Campbell Artist AGAIN with a different 12th fret inlay - Viper VXT - Adirondak Limited Each and every one of these were great guitars and we all know that. But the public wasn't interested. You can't blame Ovation, KMC or Fender for not trying. Blame the public for not buying. | ||
Mr. Ovation |
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Joined: December 2001 Posts: 7222 Location: The Great Pacific Northwest | Standingovation - 2012-06-11 11:38 PM The problem is that over the last 5 or so years Ovation made numerous attempts to revive the USA guitars within a very competitive market and each and every time the buyng public spoke with their wallets and said WE ARE NOT INTERESTED - The Traditional Series - Shiny Bowl Reissues - Adamas Custom Shop - Glen Campbell Artist Reissues - Glen Campbell Artist AGAIN with a different 12th fret inlay - Viper VXT - Adirondak Limited Each and every one of these were great guitars and we all know that. But the public wasn't interested. You can't blame Ovation, KMC or Fender for not trying. Blame the public for not buying. This is the most succinct explanation I have seen on the topic to date. There is no point in building what no one (or only a few) are buying. I used to blame marketing.. but the VXT I thought was marketed well... however.. I'm guessing if you ask 100 guitar players, ones that have not been on this site, what they think of the Ovation VXT, they will have NO CLUE what you are talking about. However, it's nice to know that we can still buy whatever model we want, if we choose to. | ||
javaman |
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Joined: January 2007 Posts: 137 Location: Massachusetts | amosmoses - 2012-06-11 10:47 PM AMF? Yes, AMF. It's been a while since it occurred and I didn't check it out before hitting the mouse. Yeah, I know the following has dwindled, and we're the last of a faithful bunch that know how good these guitars are. Maybe Fender can revive the interest in them by getting in the hands of popular artist like they once were, but that won't change my love for the Ovation guitar. | ||
stellarjim |
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Joined: August 2003 Posts: 888 Location: Louisville, OH 44641 | "Each and every one of these were great guitars and we all know that. But the public wasn't interested. You can't blame Ovation, KMC or Fender for not trying. Blame the public for not buying." We will find out in the near future if the outsourced overseas strategy works for Fender. The public still has to buy them. | ||
Old Man Arthur |
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Joined: September 2006 Posts: 10777 Location: Keepin' It Weird in Portland, OR | Here is a kinda strange thing, Javaman... Lately (the last two years), More and more people come-up and talk Lovingly to me about Ovations. How great they are/were... How everybody played them on Midnight Special and Don Kirschner's Rock Concert... (on TV during the 70's) And on stage at Live events. How everybody knew someone who had one in college... How indestructible they are.... And how they all regret selling that Balladeer or Breadwinner that they had way-back-when. And all these people are shocked when I tell them that Fender bought Ovation and moved manufacturing to Korea! Shocked... But not surprised. I don't understand the Marketing problem. Yeah, Ovations don't get the Respect they Deserve... But most people I talk to LIKE Ovations. And the people that bad-mouth Ovations? Kinda like the side-walk-commandos who criticize any motorcycle that isn't a Harley, but meanwhile, they themselves are Walking. I am also glad that I got some good Ovations while the gettin' was Good. BTW-- (just a little edit) I have Never really liked Fender guitars... Edited by Old Man Arthur 2012-06-12 7:52 AM | ||
jay |
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Joined: January 2009 Posts: 1249 Location: Texas | " that know how good these guitars are" Strictly speaking of the Ovation line, I think I am of the "were" crowd. Plugged in, all O's are fantastic...but acoustically, (jmo) the earlier Ovations seem to capture a much fuller resonance than what Ovation has produced in the past 10-15+ years. Granted, I have not played any of the collector series, but the 1537, in my experience, was the last decent acoustic guitar to come out of New Hartford. New, does not necessarily equate to better, in my limited Ovation world. Ok, bring on the stoning. | ||
ksdaddy |
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Joined: April 2003 Posts: 608 Location: Caribou, ME | Offer a 1111 Balladeer and a 1719 Custom Legend and expand the Custom Shop... an economy of scale. Crank out one Plain Jane and one blingy model. Make 8 or 10 Balladeers for every 1 Custom Legend. Double the manpower in the Custom Shop; it can be tiered... someone wants an engraved bridge and a sunburst top on a Balladeer, the new guy can do that. Someone wants a Koa top with an heart shaped soundhole, then that job goes to the upper crust in the shop. Keep it simple, not confusing to the public, rebuild the rep that Ovations are tough, reliable, and if you call the factory a human will answer. If someone has deep pockets the factory will build it. Partly Model T mentality I know.... that worked for a long time though. But what do I know? | ||
Puppetman |
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Joined: August 2011 Posts: 187 Location: Florence,SC | ...and to add salt to the wound, in the latest issue of Vintage Guitar magazine (page 80) a caption under a picture of Kevin Roland (of Dexys Midnight Runners) playing an Ovation, it says "...And here's another electric/acoustic Ovation (they were the Takamines of the 80's)." Takamines of the 80's????? | ||
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