DMgunn said:
WOW. I shoulda stopped reading a couple of pages ago, before I got irritated.......seems obvious to me that dabtl has a personal stake in this - so many petty comments in what started as a simple comparison.....
You want to compare 1911s? How about ARs, then. Say you see two on a rack at the gun shop. They are both roughly the same price. One is mil-spec, the other is not. The 2nd one also has more upper/lower play........yeah, they will both function the same, and both will likely outlive you, but there is still a difference in quality, no? A difference that you don't need to be an engineer to see......why, then, would you buy the "lesser" one?
P.S. I join the others that are hoping for some 5-ton hubs in the future.
First, I have no personal stake in any of this. Second, I have watched engineers and machinists argue for years about tolerances, machining and 'quality.'
This entire thread is about a disgruntled machinist's hurt feelings when he attempted to 'correct' the engineers and manufacturers of the AVM hubs. It is as simple as that. Gerhard probably has not seen more than a couple of hundred of these hubs in his lifetime. Yet, he knows much more than those who have made thousands over decades?
The field tests of each of these hubs will show that they each do the job required for an extended period of time. That being the case everyone admits, the differences are the cosmetic exterior and the internal workings. Both of these are legitimate sales approaches to the consumer. But the addition of ball bearings or a gasket type does not in and of itself imply a superior product. Sometimes redundancy, is just that, redundant.
Now, I personally could care less which brand of hub you purchase for your use. I picked the AVM because of my prior dealings with John Tennis. I examined the Ouverson hubs at USA6X6 before the purchase. They were and are very nicely made.
If you are concerned to have only the very best for your personal use, then you have committed to buying the sizzle rather than the steak, a common sales tactic used all the time in retailing everything from TV to AR rifles. Beauty is, after all, in the eye of the beholder.