Scott Lanterman
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- Joined
- Feb 14, 2023
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Value is always the issue in my book. It is complex, what you value is different than what I value. The equation is a standard value engineering equation and it is used by companies to help define there value proposition, but it might not be obvious because cost and performance are user defined and often complex.
If you want a high performance amp then you define what that "high performance" means to you. Are the low noise and distortion numbers at 500 watts that Nilai has divided by the $890 ea. purchase price larger than some alternative? Your actual choice is the largest V when doing an all things considered deliberation before you put down your money. The costs might be the price of the product, but maybe you are ok with your "cost" of a DIY build, and using the product without it being tested, which is a risk or another cost to you. If you value an electronic component being tested that cost translates into a cost you are willing to pay, but as the consumer you decide. I trust Hypex being a solid brand and if something went wrong I think they will respond so I decided the untested path was worth the risk and I was ok with it since I value the 500 clean watts in a small box more.
The businesses I have worked with often were not aware of this equation, you get it some economics classes that talk about value engineering. I find it useful but not everybody likes the equation. I like the equation so I use it.
To say the greatest value in the cheapest option I think confuses value with price. If you must have instrument grade tools than you are probably not looking at the cheapest. If you value VU meters than you might not want this amp at all. Value is just not that simple and I offer V = P/C with some caution because it can be used as a shortcut as opposed to helping a person clarify that the price does not relate to performance but is its own independent variable. Value is getting the performance you want at the lowest total cost. If the cheapest meets your performance desires than you have a big value that you are considering. It's not so simple in my view.
If you want a high performance amp then you define what that "high performance" means to you. Are the low noise and distortion numbers at 500 watts that Nilai has divided by the $890 ea. purchase price larger than some alternative? Your actual choice is the largest V when doing an all things considered deliberation before you put down your money. The costs might be the price of the product, but maybe you are ok with your "cost" of a DIY build, and using the product without it being tested, which is a risk or another cost to you. If you value an electronic component being tested that cost translates into a cost you are willing to pay, but as the consumer you decide. I trust Hypex being a solid brand and if something went wrong I think they will respond so I decided the untested path was worth the risk and I was ok with it since I value the 500 clean watts in a small box more.
The businesses I have worked with often were not aware of this equation, you get it some economics classes that talk about value engineering. I find it useful but not everybody likes the equation. I like the equation so I use it.
To say the greatest value in the cheapest option I think confuses value with price. If you must have instrument grade tools than you are probably not looking at the cheapest. If you value VU meters than you might not want this amp at all. Value is just not that simple and I offer V = P/C with some caution because it can be used as a shortcut as opposed to helping a person clarify that the price does not relate to performance but is its own independent variable. Value is getting the performance you want at the lowest total cost. If the cheapest meets your performance desires than you have a big value that you are considering. It's not so simple in my view.
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