Price fixing among tire manufacturers

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by Ted Mittelstaedt, Dec 31, 2007.

  1. Then there was the MFM vs RLL situation. A 30MB MFM drive could often
    be used withan RLL drive controller and get 30MB. a 30MB RLL could
    ALWAYS be installed as a 20MB on an MFM controller. Then there werer
    sector size settings that could be changed too that affected useable
    capacity.
     
    clare at snyder.on.ca, Jan 2, 2008
    #81
  2. The correct word is "DEPLETED"
    The Aquifers ARE being depleted faster than they are recharged. The
    fresh water ends up diluting the salt water untill it evaporates
    (slower from salt than fresh water bodies) and falls again as rain
    (which with changing weather patterns means the water might NEVER
    return to where it was originally extracted from the aquifer, and the
    aquifer may NEVER be recharged.

    It IS a SERIOUS issue. No Chicken Little involved.
     
    clare at snyder.on.ca, Jan 2, 2008
    #82
  3. I believe that what yo are noticing is, "what the market will bear,"
    pricing.

    I'm sure that the marketing guys all get out to see what the competition
    costs, and they price accordingly. If people that want a 700 tire will pay
    $95, then the tire makers are going to charge $95. They will sell an
    equivelent size 400 tire for $90, if the market will bear it. This is not
    price fixing as much as it is comptetitive pricing.

    There is a chance that when you shop Sears, Costco, and America's Tire for
    the same size and make of tire, the price will be within pennies of the same
    price. Expand the search to different makes of the same size, and the
    pricing differential may or may not grow, depending on many factors.

    You can grow your search from a 205 to a 215 or 225, with an attendant
    reduction is sidewall -- reduction from 70 to 65 or 60 -- to arrive at the
    same overall diameter, and dial in the 700 rating you want, and perhaps find
    more price variances. A 205/70 is a very narrow tire, and maybe that size is
    not widely used -- which makes the prices go up.

    My BMW took a 225/55x15 as the standard fitment. This size came on my car as
    a Goodyear Eagle, but nobody (other car makers) else used it, and as a
    consequence, the size was very expensive to replace. I found myself facing a
    charge of $1000 out-the-door for them, $250 each for four. I switched to a
    225/45x17, bought 5 new rims and tires, and paid only about $150 more than I
    would have paid for 4 tires of the 15" size. Now, I can fit a new set of
    tires (4) on my car for about $450 instead of $1000.

    I'm not suggesting you buy new rims, I'm only illustrating that a tire size
    that is more widely used will be cheaper than a tire with a very narrow
    market space.




    <snip rest>
     
    Jeff Strickland, Jan 2, 2008
    #83
  4. Ted Mittelstaedt

    Jeff Guest

    Well, they said that about gasoline prices. They said that people
    wouldn't pay more than $2.00 per gallon. Oopsie. The market will will
    obviously bear $3.00 gasoline. An oil company can price the gasoline at
    $10.00 per gallon if they want. They won't have many takers, though,
    unless the gas station is the only one near an airport or in a wide area.

    What he's noticing is competition.
     
    Jeff, Jan 2, 2008
    #84
  5. Ted Mittelstaedt

    Duncan Guest

    Forget about buying name-brand tires. The off-brands are made by the same
    companies.
    Go to your local one-man garage mechanic and tell him you want decent tires
    that are 'Blems'. Blems are Blemmished tires meaning they have a slight,
    often unnoticable, cosmetic defect... like a letter on the sidewall is not
    perfect but the price is up to 1/3 lower. You might also want to consider
    re-caps which are cheaper still, sometimes as low as $35-40 a tire. My
    neighbor buys her tires from the junkyard and has come home with like new
    Goodyears for $10 each.
     
    Duncan, Jan 2, 2008
    #85
  6. Ted Mittelstaedt

    Jeff Guest

    Some off-brand tires are made by the same companies. Some are made by
    other companies, like companies in China. In addition, even if off-brand
    tires are made by the same companies, they may be made with different
    materials or to lower standards than the brand tires. I am not saying
    that you can't save money this way, but only that the tires are not
    necessarily the same, although they might be.

    Jeff
     
    Jeff, Jan 2, 2008
    #86
  7. .... or the other stations nearby also price their gas at $10. Sure, most
    will not stop and pay that kind of money, but if that is the only number
    they see, and they need gas, they will have to pay. Granted, they will only
    buy a gallon or two at that price in the hopes they find another station
    with better pricing before they get to the end of that load of fuel.

    Personally, I do not buy into the idea that gasoline is priced on a strictly
    supply & demand model. I think there is a huge, "why charge $1.00 for one
    gallon if you can get away with charging $2.00 for a half gallon?" mentality
    going on.

    Yes, the price of crude rises and this pushes up the price at the pump. But,
    I'd suggest that prices at the pump rise faster than the price of crude, and
    they rise occasionally when the price of crude is falling. I've even noticed
    crude prices go up and pump prices remain flat. But, I've noticed on far
    more occasions that the price of gas shoots up a quarter or so in a couple
    of days, then floats back down ten or twelve cents over several weeks, all
    while crude prices have not moved.

    Rising crude prices should have a fixed affect on prices at the pump because
    crude is a fixed quantity of oil, and it produces the same quantity of
    gasoline, no matter how much it costs. So, if a barrel of crude is 55
    gallons <or whatever it is> and this much crude can make 20 gallons of
    gasoline <or whatever it can make>, then a rise in crude prices of a dollar
    should translate to a rise in gas prices of about 3 cents. (I do not know
    how many gallons in a barrel, not how many gallons of gas a barrel of crude
    makes, and it isn't really important here. I wanted to illustrate that a
    dollar change in a barrel of crude works through the system to affect a
    3-cent change in a gallon of gas.) The bottom line is, gas prices change for
    many reasons other than fluctuations in the price of crude, many of those
    reasons come out of the refineries themselves.
     
    Jeff Strickland, Jan 3, 2008
    #87
  8. Ted Mittelstaedt

    Jeff Guest

    We pretty much agree here.

    It takes a few months to go from well to gasoline pump. So the prices at
    the pump often reflect the prices from a few months ago, but usually
    only if the price is going down (as you point out, prices tend to shoot
    up faster than they go down).
    Yeah. Stations rise gasoline prices as soon as the cost of the next
    truckload goes up, even if they have enough gas for a week. However, the
    keep the price of the gas up as long as they can. What would you do?
    That's pretty close. A barrel is 42 gal., but after refining, it makes
    nearly 50 gallons of fuel and other petroleum products, because ethanol
    and other additives are added. So each rise of $1.00 in the crude oil
    price should raise the cost of a gallon of gasoline by about $0.02 to
    $0.025.

    And the price does clearly stick pretty close to this:

    <http://inflationdata.com/inflation/Inflation_Rate/gas_vs_oil_price_comparison.htm>

    Obviously, there are other factors at play than just the cost of crude oil.
    There are many reasons, not the least of which is the desire of everyone
    who sells crude oil and gasoline to sell it for the highest price
    possible. If they can keep the price up, they will. However, the people
    who don't make more profit is the gas stations. Their costs go up about
    $0.01 to $0.02 for every $1.00 the gas goes up, because the credit card
    processing fees are fixed (usually around $0.20 + 2% or so), so when the
    price shoots up by $1, it costs them $0.02 more to pump it when someone
    uses a credit card.

    They other things that do affect the price of gas are production
    problems (that's why the price of gasoline went up after the hurricanes
    in the Gulf two years ago), temporary or anticipated shortages when
    there are refinery fires or when the refineries change the type of fuel
    in the spring and winter (winter blend <--> fuel oil for heating houses
    <--> summer blend <--> diesel). Even where the gas station is located
    affects the cost that the gas station pays for fuel (gas stations near
    interstates or airports often pay more for gas than if they are located
    in small cities away from the interstate; gas stations in CA also pay
    more because it costs more to make the fuel mandated by CA law).

    Jeff
     
    Jeff, Jan 3, 2008
    #88
  9. Nobody puts whitewall or white lettering tires on the side of a minivan
    unless they want to look like the local neighborhood child pervert. I think
    the opportunity for blemished tires in the size I'm looking for is low since
    most blems deal with lettering/ whitewall problems.
    I bought a set of recaps once when Les Schwab was still selling them They
    did their
    own recapping. All 4 tires had different carcasses. The tread wore out
    very quickly.
    This is yet another 1950's stunt. It worked fine with Bias Ply tires (and
    still does with
    semi truck tires which aren't radial) but passenger car recappers aren't
    setup to categorize
    tire carcasses on anything other than size, so your never going to get a set
    of tires with the
    same handling characteristics. It's a non-starter for modern radials and
    likely would make
    the car handling dangerous for the average driver.

    My
    Chances of finding a decent set of FOUR in a wrecking yard are next to
    nothing.
    The reason is there's 2 kinds of cars in a wrecking yard. The first are old
    POS cars
    that engine failed. The people that ran those cars knew they were dying and
    so
    didn't maintain them worth shit - which means they put the crappiest cheap
    tires they
    could find on them. The second type of cars are new nice cars that got
    smashed up.
    What happens with those is if the tires are really nice, really expensive
    tires, the places
    that sell used tires (there's a few in our area) all have deals with the
    yards where they
    get called when those cars come in and they get first dibs on them.
    Otherwise they
    go right into the yards. And 90% of the time, 1 of the quadrants of the car
    is really
    smashed up bad, and that side wheel and tire are hashed.

    If the car has aluminum mags, the yards immediately dismount the tires and
    throw them
    into the big pile of old tires and they go off to the tire recycler, and the
    aluminum
    mags go to the smelter. My van has aluminum mags. If they have steel rims,
    they sit,
    on the rims, until the steel price on mixed metal goes up, and then the
    wreckers start
    smashing cars and throwing the rims and tires in with the steel that goes
    off to the steel
    shredder.

    Sometimes you can find a set of TWO or THREE nice tires with less than 20%
    treadwear
    on them. You will be competing with the Mexicans in the yard who are
    looking for cheap
    tires for their beater cars of course. They will still
    be on the steel rims and your going to have to pay to have them dismounted.
    And, there
    will be no road hazard warranty on them so a year down the road if one goes
    flat, your
    going to be paying for a flat repair, and if one gets punctured to where it
    can't be fixed,
    your going to be headed back to the wrecker to find another.

    The wreckers are fine if your just looking for ONE tire that matches a set
    that you already
    have, for example, you ran over a pothole and destroyed the tire sidewall of
    a set of 4
    that are worn down only 15% or so. The alternative is of course buying a
    new set of 2
    tires to get even tread on both sides of that axle.

    Ted
     
    Ted Mittelstaedt, Jan 3, 2008
    #89
  10. Ted Mittelstaedt

    Bill Putney Guest

    So they're priced like bikinis: The less material, the higher the price.

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    address with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, Jan 3, 2008
    #90
  11. Many "off brand" or "private brand" tires are/were actually built to a
    HIGHER standard than the OEM quality brand name tires. When UniRoyal
    built the Shell branded tires in the Kitchener Ontario plant, Uniroyal
    employees would come and buy the SHELL tires because they were better
    tires than the Uniroyal tires.
     
    clare at snyder.on.ca, Jan 3, 2008
    #91
  12. Ted Mittelstaedt

    Bill Putney Guest

    If you're a mechanic, you call that the ratchet effect. If you're in
    electronics, you call that the diode effect. If you are in hydraulics,
    you call that the check valve effect.

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    address with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, Jan 3, 2008
    #92
  13. Ted Mittelstaedt

    Bill Putney Guest

    With treadware ratings of 200 to 350.

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    address with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, Jan 3, 2008
    #93
  14. Ted Mittelstaedt

    MG Guest

    At least some gas is sold on the commodities market. That really sends the
    price structure into the twilight zone.

    mg
     
    MG, Jan 3, 2008
    #94
  15. Ted Mittelstaedt

    Tony Harding Guest

    Christ, I hope not! :)
     
    Tony Harding, Jan 3, 2008
    #95
  16. Ted Mittelstaedt

    Tony Harding Guest

    So it costs AM General 5x as much to produce a $100,000 Hummer than it
    costs Honda to produce a $20,000 Accord (hey, back on topic!)?

    You must be aware why the US automakers loved selling so many SUVs these
    past several years - enormous profit margins. It obviously doesn't cost
    twice as much to produce a $40,000 SUV than it does to produce a $20,000
    sedan.
    This is fine in Adam Smith's world of free entry/exit from a business,
    no other barriers, etc. The real world is quite different, of course.
    What might be the startup cost for bottling soda, or opening a new car
    dealership, etc.?

    There are some highly competitive industries, of course, e.g., the
    commoditized PC business that you mentioned, which is why I didn't say
    "all" in my original post. But even in the personal computer business,
    laptops and Apple are exceptions.

    Finally, please don't claim any significant advantages to the consumer
    from any putative competition in the oil & gas industry - Exxon Mobil
    hasn't posted record profits the past few years because they're cutting
    prices to the bone.

    The recently retired CEO of Exxon Mobil had an attractive retirement
    package, of course, in the neighborhood of $400 million.

    http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=1841989
     
    Tony Harding, Jan 3, 2008
    #96
  17. Ted Mittelstaedt

    Tony Harding Guest

    Which planet are you from again?
    Yeah, and?
     
    Tony Harding, Jan 3, 2008
    #97
  18. Ted Mittelstaedt

    Tony Harding Guest

    You need to chat with Edwin. ;)
     
    Tony Harding, Jan 3, 2008
    #98
  19. Ted Mittelstaedt

    Tony Harding Guest

    So what? So was I and millions of other people, no one was *the*
    computer business.
     
    Tony Harding, Jan 3, 2008
    #99
  20. I never said it wasn't sterile. Here's the problem:
    The normal saline concentration of human blood is about 9,000 ppM.
    The saline concentration of human urine is about 22,000 ppM.
    If _all_ you drank was your urine, the saline concentration of your
    blood would rise; normally your body deals with this by dilution,
    adding more water (you get thirstier). So, you have another glass of
    urine. Now, remember, you're also losing water via perspiration and
    respiration. Sooner than later, you will collapse from dehydration.
    Excess salt doesn't get metabolized any further. It will just get more
    concentrated.

    --Gene
     
    Gene S. Berkowitz, Jan 3, 2008
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