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Post by hobbs101 on Apr 21, 2009 15:53:55 GMT -5
Best wishes and Good Luck Josh, it was a pleasure meeting you last year and thanks for your help. Hopefully I'll see you at the con this year. And lets not overreact guys, true Josh and his skill are no longer a part of Splawn amps but Scott is and I'll wager that he won't let quality slip the least bit, ask Josh,I'll bet he'll say the same.
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luigi
Junior Member
Posts: 79
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Post by luigi on Apr 21, 2009 20:16:06 GMT -5
Best to you and your family Josh!!! Appreciate the talks and conversations! we had over the phone!. It's been a while. Luis
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Post by MetalHeart on Apr 21, 2009 21:36:59 GMT -5
Good luck Josh in whatever you decide to do I remember b.s.ing with you at Splawn Con 2007
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Post by SonicExplorer on Apr 22, 2009 17:10:23 GMT -5
Hold on, let's avoid making comments that imply Splawn may be compromising something. I'm not going to start tossing out all the possible hypothetical explanations, but suffice to say, just because some new manufacturing equipment was purchased by no means indicates things are being compromised or turned into a production line. For example, we all know circuit boards are used, right? Well, if the etching or soldering aspect of the circuit boards were being outsourced previously, then it's possible by bringing that work in house it is both a cost saving AND quality improvement. Follow?? Again, this is just a hypothetical example.
Although Scott is a business man, it's unlikey he'd do something that would compromise the products, so let's not jump to any conclusions. As long as the amps continue to sound great and continue to be dependable, that's all that matters. And I'm confident both will continue to be the case.
Sonic
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Post by supercharged350 on Apr 22, 2009 17:28:08 GMT -5
Hold on, let's avoid making comments that imply Splawn may be compromising something. I'm not going to start tossing out all the possible hypothetical explanations, but suffice to say, just because some new manufacturing equipment was purchased by no means indicates things are being compromised or turned into a production line. For example, we all know circuit boards are used, right? Well, if the etching or soldering aspect of the circuit boards were being outsourced previously, then it's possible by bringing that work in house it is both a cost saving AND quality improvement. Follow?? Again, this is just a hypothetical example. Although Scott is a business man, it's unlikey he'd do something that would compromise the products, so let's not jump to any conclusions. As long as the amps continue to sound great and continue to be dependable, that's all that matters. And I'm confident both will continue to be the case. Sonic +1 Hooray for the voice of reason.
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