Hman442 wrote:The chrome on the air version is probably more fire proof, hence worth 10 times as much
Consider the volume ? Used in 100, 200, 300 series for 25 years, AFTER being used in who could even fathom how many G.M. autos since the '40s. Seems like the engineering and approval costs were probably amortized out...60 years ago. My point is, in this example, does the airplane vendor use some special, high quality, pot metal guy that x rays each piece and stress tests every 17th one, or, is the $200.00 latch the same as the $20.00 latch sold by the Chevy restoration shop ?mtv wrote:Any of you jokers ever consider the kind of volume that manufacturers of this sort of stuff produce? If every airplane in the US used these latches, AND they wore out regularly, I'm guessing the price would still be high.
Now, if you were to be able to sell, say 100,000 a year, that might bring prices down.
Blame the FAA and its certification requirements for anything you like, but don't forget there is this thing called supply and demand......and the demand for 1954 Cessna window latches is, ummmm, kinda small.
MTV
Hman442 wrote:Consider the volume ? Used in 100, 200, 300 series for 25 years, AFTER being used in who could even fathom how many G.M. autos since the '40s. Seems like the engineering and approval costs were probably amortized out...60 years ago. My point is, in this example, does the airplane vendor use some special, high quality, pot metal guy that x rays each piece and stress tests every 17th one, or, is the $200.00 latch the same as the $20.00 latch sold by the Chevy restoration shop ?
C180_guy wrote:Hman442 wrote:Consider the volume ? Used in 100, 200, 300 series for 25 years, AFTER being used in who could even fathom how many G.M. autos since the '40s. Seems like the engineering and approval costs were probably amortized out...60 years ago. My point is, in this example, does the airplane vendor use some special, high quality, pot metal guy that x rays each piece and stress tests every 17th one, or, is the $200.00 latch the same as the $20.00 latch sold by the Chevy restoration shop ?
^^^ This. Cessna used the same window latches and door handles straight out of Detroit. As far as acceptance testing/production sample testing - really? Do you really think Cessna did any of that?
lesuther wrote:Having looked at this several years ago, since I was sourcing my own cast steel parts for several months, I figured it would cost about 1400 in tooling and $7-$9 in parts delivered, for a run of high quality post machined
chromed latches for a run of up to a thousand, and about $6 for 2000 sets. The automotive version is correctly priced, or even a better deal than I'd offer.
It would never be worthwhile to go through the Quixotic process of certifying such a project. The regulatory framework and realities of its execution (culture, ability, and priorities of the FAA) make it absurd to do so and even break even for all intents and purposes. Each unit sold would represent paying a series of interlocutors astounding sums accumulated from the effort unrelated to a value for the sale.
In the end, I put mine on the mill, hogged it out, installed bushings, made some small hinge pins, and now have better latches than they ever were for about $0.50 each in parts and a few hours of spare time. The chrome isn't pristine, but I didnt want to add the time to blast it off and re-plate them until I had more parts to plate.
mtv wrote:And, how long would it take you to sell 1000 of these things? Your descendants would be trying to sell the things long after you're gone.
mtv wrote:So, if you can find a duplicate or close for cheap, go for it.
MTV
C180_guy wrote:https://www.chevsofthe40s.com/detail/1266/Chevrolet_Vent_Window_Latch_Handle_Left_Side.html
https://niagaraairparts.com/product/dir ... w-latches/
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