enframed wrote:a poorly made machine is poorly made either because it's parts are poorly made or the labor building them is sub-par. i can't see any other possible reasons.
- the work culture at the manufacturing facility is the outmoded traditional American hierarchical system that doesn't promote efficiency
- the physical plant and infrastructure is 40 years old rather than 8
- Management sees no incentive to modernize a functioning plant, particularly when modernization involves production downtime and capital expenditure on infrastructure that may be rationalized (fancy B-school term for "shut down") soon
There's 3 more reasons just off the top of my head. I could probably come up with a few more reasons a poorly made machine may exist, and they wouldn't have any more to do with the presence or absence of a union than those three do. The big one in my mind is the age of the transplants relative to some of the older Big 3 facilities. Having worked in both modern and ancient (like WWII vintage) factories I can assure you that quality work out of an older shop is very much more difficult to achieve.
[edit] I see that oxlongm has basically supported some of this mumbo-jumbo I spouted above. Salut! oxlongm! Also in the interest of full disclosure, the factory I currently toil in is a Japanese/American joint venture that is unionized, so I'm not completely talking out of my ass...