I'll be the first to venture a guess.
OB?
I would absolutely, positively say it is NOT OB Cues. They are still made in Texas. McDermott and Viking as well as others already import some of their cue lines from China.
I'll be the first to venture a guess.
OB?
I would absolutely, positively say it is NOT OB Cues. They are still made in Texas. McDermott and Viking as well as others already import some of their cue lines from China.
But, in the case of McDermott anyway, not the ones that are actually McDermott branded. Only the lines labeled "Star" and "Lucky" are imported. They are100% up front about this and could not be more clear. No possible chance for misinterpretation.
Well, maybe not any "chance" of misinterpretationNo country of origin anywhere that I could see. I guess the new terminology of the day is "globally manufactured" which apparently means China. Sure a lot less wording in the word China... I mean, if they don't want to confuse anyone
Star cues are designed, engineered, exclusively distributed and guaranteed for life against manufacturing defects by McDermott Cue. They feature premium maple and exotic woods mixed with intricate 4-color overlays. Manufactured globally using McDermott's technology, Star cues provide the highest quality pool cue in the under $200 price range.
Lucky cues offer a mix of premium maple cues and intricate graphic overlays. These features give you an exceptional value for one of the most solid hitting globally manufactured cues in the industry. Lucky cues are designed, engineered and exclusively distributed by McDermott Cu
Yeah, many overseas companies got smart as American shoppers learned about where some products were made. They simply purchased the brand name from an American company and re-branded their own. My ex refused to buy an off brand mini-fridge because there was a Whirlpool available from BJ's. After getting it home, she discovered it was the exact same unit she refused to buy under a different 'unknown" name.
Any of you buy a Buick Encore? Check to see where it is manufactured? Chevy Trax? Same builder! Buy a Volvo? Owned by Geely of China. Horror of horrors, so is Lotus Cars. Jaguar / Land Rover? Owned by an Indian company. Oh well.
Lyn
I don't care where a product is made. Provided that the product is of good quality and is "ethically produced" (i.e. no child sweatshop labor), it's stupid imo to care about where it's from.
That being said, shame on the company for misrepresenting their product as "made in the USA".
I'll be the first to venture a guess.
OB?
Westinghouse, Polaroid, RCA, Nakamich (granted were overseas to begin with but were a quality brand at one point), are some other companies that are just known names that were sold to be used in cheap products.
It is getting so even if you buy from a known brand with a known quality, WHERE you buy is is important. If you get a TV on black friday or a lawn mower from WalMart rather than a garden store, you could be getting the brand name slapped onto a cheaper and less quality product. I read a while ago that you can get a mower from Home Depot that may look like and have the same brand as mower from a higher end place, but the Home Depot mower would be made with cheaper materials and less attention to detail. TVs you buy cheap can be made especially to be cheap, not sales on good models. You can have less HDMI ports,no computer port on the cheap model, cheaper screen, lower quality stand and plastic, etc...
The OP should just say who it is instead of being all vague.
I agree with this, but still recognize that generally a "Made in USA" product is worth more on the open market than a "globally sourced" counterpart. This would certainly be true with pool cues. Perceptions and stereotypes die hard and slow.
Agreed. This would also give the company in question an opportunity to comment on this as the information may or may not be accurate.