dkmc
Diamond
- Joined
- Jan 13, 2002
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Have no idea who Privet is. Hope they are not corporate rapists.
Have no idea who Privet is. Hope they are not corporate rapists.
With a name including the phrase "Fund management LLC"....what do you think ?
"The transaction provides significant value and liquidity for our
shareholders, as well as continuity and opportunities for future growth for our employees, and a full opportunity to market test the price in a rigorous go-shop process"
And their response to the low-cost CNC market revolution was to buy Bridgeport?
Hardinge was just a bit late to the game. THEY should have been the ones with a programmable 5C index. Instead, Gene Haas was selling them out of his car while Hardinge sat fat and happy commanding $50K for an HLV-H.
And their response to the low-cost CNC market revolution was to buy Bridgeport?
I have some "STUF" for sale on ebay. I think that I will rebrand it all Hardinge"and market test the price in a rigorous go-shop process" before they flood the market and destroy the name completely.I guess this is how capitalism works,but it is a mystery to me ,how a thing called privat management llc came up with 245 million dollars. Edwin Dirnbeck
I was just looking at my Hardinge literature recently and came across the Haas programmable 5C indexer advertised and sold by Hardinge in 1986. The indexer seems to be based either upon the Hardinge HV4 indexer, or the Finn Speed-Dex 24 indexer.
ShopHardinge - HV 2P4 Hardinge HV4 Price $10,300.00
Products Finn Speed-Dex 24 Price $1670.48
Comparing the current prices of the Hardinge and Finn products, which are very similar, might provide a clue to Hardinge's current financial situation, whatever that may be.
Larry
View attachment 220555 View attachment 220556
while exploiting the reputation and brandname as long as possible: typical financial engineer process used on cookies to computers. The problem is, that the miscreant financial engineers don't realize that tooling and such equipment have very "objective" standards and functionality expectations that cannot be "hyped" to a generic consumer.
I bought a Hardinge HV 4 new in 1988 for $875. Running that price through an on line inflation calculator indicates that it should be $1850 in present day dollars. A price of $10,300 leaves me incredulous. And I'm glad I filled out my set of 5C collets to include "32's" (new Hardinge) when I did.
David
Notice
This website or its third-party tools process personal data (e.g. browsing data or IP addresses) and use cookies or other identifiers, which are necessary for its functioning and required to achieve the purposes illustrated in the cookie policy. To learn more, please refer to the cookie policy. In case of sale of your personal information, you may opt out by sending us an email via our Contact Us page. To find out more about the categories of personal information collected and the purposes for which such information will be used, please refer to our privacy policy. You accept the use of cookies or other identifiers by closing or dismissing this notice, by scrolling this page, by clicking a link or button or by continuing to browse otherwise.