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question

How do you explain to management that buying 'compatible' servo motors from unknown suppliers might save 30% upfront but could cost 300% more in unplanned downtime and quality rejects?

answer

Hey, I totally get why management might be tempted by those cheaper 'compatible' servo motors - saving 30% upfront sounds great on paper! But here's the thing I'd explain: we're not just buying parts, we're buying reliability and production uptime.

Think of it like this: OEM motors come with proven quality control, proper documentation, and manufacturer support. Those unknown suppliers might cut corners on materials, testing, or even use counterfeit components. When one of those 'bargain' motors fails unexpectedly (and they often do), we're not just replacing a $500 motor - we're paying for hours of production downtime, emergency maintenance labor, and potentially scrapping thousands of dollars worth of product that got ruined during the failure.

The real kicker? That 300% extra cost estimate is actually conservative. I've seen cases where a single cheap motor failure caused days of downtime, quality rejects that ruined customer relationships, and emergency shipping costs that wiped out years of 'savings' from buying cheap parts. Plus, with OEM motors, we get warranty coverage and predictable maintenance schedules - not to mention the peace of mind that comes with knowing our production line won't suddenly stop because we tried to save a few bucks.

It's like buying insurance for our production capacity. The upfront savings look tempting, but the hidden costs can bankrupt our efficiency and reputation.

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