(11-30-2016, 10:29 PM)MileMarker60 Wrote: There is a huge difference in your Dodge Charger example. Dodge didn't go out of business, they just discounted the model then brought it back years later.
A better example is one you pointed out. Indian Motorcycles! A business that went bankrupt in 53, then bought back to life in 2011.
I don't think you're going to find many people that look at the "new" Indian the same way they look at early 1910-1950 Indians.
It's not because the new one is junk... It's just not the "Old" Indian if you know what I mean.
I don't think the Dodge examples are wrong. The company is under different ownership today than it was in 1971, the models are manufactured in different facilities than they were in 1971, and the production techniques are different than they were in 1971. The only thing that is the same is the model designators. Seems like a fair comparison to me...
And the people that dislike the new Indians, versus the old Indians do so for nostalgic reasons, not quality issues.
Can't argue with nostalgia, and I certainly won't argue with your love of the history of the name Wade & Butcher. Nostalgia is what it is, and appeals to everyone differently.
My only concern is the idea that new razors cannot be of the same or better quality than the old razors. Logic indicates that the quality of a razor manufactured today can FAR exceed the quality of a razor manufactured in 1901. That's logic.
To say that one does not like resurrecting the name of Wade & Butcher for nostalgic reasons is different than saying there can be no comparison between a razor made under new ownership in South Africa, and a razor made under old ownership in Sheffield, England.
Nostalgia does not create quality. In fact, very often nostalgia will create a fondness for an inferior product based on an intangible emotional attachment, rather than the actual quality and/or utility of the product...
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