I see your point about those '$29 cheap CD players'. We as a culture have become so addicted to having the newest, best and the most of everything that product lifespans are nowhere near as long as possible.
Take computers, for example... the computer I'm using right now has a sticker in the corner that says 'Designed for Windows '98' on it. For me, this is still a good computer because as long as it runs, I can get software and I can still surf the Web with it, I'll keep it. For others, it's last year's model and junk. I'm fascinated by the shrinking time a computer has once it comes out until it's superseded. Once it was years between new generations, but now it's about nine months or so. Soon, it won't just seem like your computer is obsolete before you bring it home, it will actually be that way.
All those underutilized computers, ipods, DVD players, etc. have to go somewhere, and China is the biggest buyer of scrapmetals on the planet. I have seen some of the photos of the piles of dead consumer goods and heard stories about the environmental byproducts of their own style of reclaiming materials from these goods.
We as musical instrument manufacturers are not only an almost immeasurably small fraction of the total wastestream, but IMHO every one of us designs and builds their products to last much more than ten years or so. We don't design our products to go into a $149 'Christmas gift' box with a guitar and amp made in Hostilistan. I think the problem is that those in authority had a problem to fix, and they did it. Unfortunately, they didn't seem to bother to differentiate between the amount of lead in a huge pile of cheap DVD players and that in a very very small pile of pickups. For them, lead is lead. For us, it's a very big deal.
Am I going to go to the RoHS standard? Eventually, I'll have to, just like everyone else. Market forces will see to that, I'm sure. But right now, it seems just a bit like the RoHS committee are very much overcompensating
for a problem that was overlooked for a long time.
Ken
(an English translation is available - email me at pickups@angeltone.com for details)
Take computers, for example... the computer I'm using right now has a sticker in the corner that says 'Designed for Windows '98' on it. For me, this is still a good computer because as long as it runs, I can get software and I can still surf the Web with it, I'll keep it. For others, it's last year's model and junk. I'm fascinated by the shrinking time a computer has once it comes out until it's superseded. Once it was years between new generations, but now it's about nine months or so. Soon, it won't just seem like your computer is obsolete before you bring it home, it will actually be that way.
All those underutilized computers, ipods, DVD players, etc. have to go somewhere, and China is the biggest buyer of scrapmetals on the planet. I have seen some of the photos of the piles of dead consumer goods and heard stories about the environmental byproducts of their own style of reclaiming materials from these goods.
We as musical instrument manufacturers are not only an almost immeasurably small fraction of the total wastestream, but IMHO every one of us designs and builds their products to last much more than ten years or so. We don't design our products to go into a $149 'Christmas gift' box with a guitar and amp made in Hostilistan. I think the problem is that those in authority had a problem to fix, and they did it. Unfortunately, they didn't seem to bother to differentiate between the amount of lead in a huge pile of cheap DVD players and that in a very very small pile of pickups. For them, lead is lead. For us, it's a very big deal.
Am I going to go to the RoHS standard? Eventually, I'll have to, just like everyone else. Market forces will see to that, I'm sure. But right now, it seems just a bit like the RoHS committee are very much overcompensating
for a problem that was overlooked for a long time.
Ken
(an English translation is available - email me at pickups@angeltone.com for details)
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