Hornby and Rails
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#251888
(In Topic #13839)

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Rails have issued an apology saying that, after 35 years of trading with Hornby, with immediate effect they will no longer be able to supply any of the pre-orders or take orders for any future releases.
Seems there's trouble at t'mill somewhere …………………………………
'Petermac
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Last edit: by TeaselBay
Posted

Site staff



Dear Valued customer,
We regret to inform you that after over 35 years of trading with Hornby, with immediate effect we are unable to fulfil any orders for forthcoming release or out of stock Hornby products.
Therefore over the coming days we will be cancelling pre orders and informing customers personally. We apologise unreservedly for the inconvenience this will cause you.
We would like to make it clear that this only affects Hornby products that are on pre order or out of stock. All our other extensive range of brands are unaffected.
John Barber
Managing Director
Rails of Sheffield Limited
:hmm :hmm :hmm
Last edit: by Ed
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Connor
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The way I see it is that they will all hide behind bland statements of 'commercial sensitivity', etc. but in reality they are behaving like a bunch of children who have allowed a spat to get out of hand.
Terry
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I partially agree with you Terry although I think the main losers will be the box shifters.Neither Rails of Sheffield or Hornby will benefit from this. After the Bachmann/Hattons debacle the latter has become a much less interesting place to shop. I'm surprised the manufacturers can afford to lose the big box shifters who have an annual turnover in the £millions.
The way I see it is that they will all hide behind bland statements of 'commercial sensitivity', etc. but in reality they are behaving like a bunch of children who have allowed a spat to get out of hand.
Terry
I obviously have no idea of their financial setup but most companies have to service some kind of finance and, to suddenly lose a huge chunk of their turnover must worry their backers.
As you say, Hattons is now a less interesting place to shop and I'd imagine, for those who use them, the same will happen to Rails.
We don't know what actually triggered the split but, from the tone of their announcement, Rails are not happy with what's happened - nor I suspect, are their bankers !
The fact is, if people want to buy Bachmann or Hornby products, they'll still do so regardless of where they spend their money so, on that premise, the manufacturers will only suffer in so far as either Bachmann or Hornby offer an alterative version of a particular model and those originally wanting the Hornby version for example, change their minds and buy Bachmann.
The downside for us of course, is that we'll almost certainly have to pay more.
'Petermac
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It's very sad though.
Posted

Site staff

Both rails and Hattons still have a strong revenue stream from second hand but you can see going forward Hattons feeling free to target Bachmann's back catalogue and Rails doing the same to Hornby ?
Can these two manufacturers afford yet more players picking off the best items from their ranges in direct competition ? Bearing in mind that neither Bachmann or Hornby get anything from the re sale of their products but rely solely on revenue from new product sold via franchises.
Whatever you think of Hattons or Rails, they shift volume. . . Both manufacturers need volume to survive
Interesting times ahead methinks
Cheers
Matt
Wasnie me, a big boy did it and ran away
"Why did you volunteer ? I didn't Sir, the other three stepped backwards"
"Why did you volunteer ? I didn't Sir, the other three stepped backwards"
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Terry
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Discounting rules and common "marketing sense" will prohibit too much in the way of discounting - I'd guess for every 5 or 10% of "extra" discount, one has to sell maybe 10 times the volume just to stand still.
I think they'll both shrink at least a little, maybe more, and specialise in their respective suppliers - Hornby for Hattons and Bachmann for Rails.
It could be the good times are over for us …………………………
'Petermac
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They are trying to establish themselves as "manufacturers" and clearly saw the Terrier as a good model to take to the market. Was this a good choice? Hornby's Terrier is a decent model, why challenge it?
If I were contemplating a leap into manufacturing with all the financial risks involved, I would be tempted to go for something that survived into BR livery like a LNER J6 or some of the GWR classes (is there a model of a Saint?) etc.
Barry
Last edit: by Barry Miltenburg
Shed dweller, Softie Southerner and Meglomaniac
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Barry, the Terriers did survive into BR livery and a number are still with us on at least four preserved railways here in the South East. In fact, I did a loco driving course on one of them.
Terry
Last edit: by col.stephens
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While protecting your copyright is normal, trying to enforce what in essence is a monopoly when you do not own it is not. "Sell ours or else you will suffer" attitude. Kudos to Rails for standing up to bullying. Are model stores only to produce niche models that the big boys can't be bothered with? Or not produce better models than they continue to offer? It's also hypocritical. Bachmann and Hornby have over the years produced the same model. It seems they get around it by (for the most part) not being contemporaneous. As far as I know no retailer was penalized for selling both of them. And not bothering to tell one of your main box shifters (or the people who pay your salary by actually buying your product) what's in the pipeline beggars belief. Given the cost nobody is going to contemplate developing a competitive model that is currently under development. Secretly developing a new model? So punters continue to buy the old one no doubt. Rest assured that if the big boys owned the manufacturing facilities in China there would be no competition.
Interestingly Bachmann here face competition in nearly all of their range. As do Broadway, Atlas, Athearn and Walthers. Newcomers such as Rapido carved out market shared with a better product. Not a different one. Keeps pricing honest.
Nigel
©Nigel C. Phillips
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For information: no Saint, but Hornby had the very similar Star until recently, which is due to be re-released soon, at the £160-170 price point. An 'as new' pre-owned Star arrived here last year from a large UK box shifter, which rattled so much from the broken bits not actually missing from the package that I stuck the sticky tape down and sent it back and am not holding my breath that the latest iteration will actually be an improved one.I'm guessing that this is Rails' call.
They are trying to establish themselves as "manufacturers" and clearly saw the Terrier as a good model to take to the market. Was this a good choice? Hornby's Terrier is a decent model, why challenge it?
If I were contemplating a leap into manufacturing with all the financial risks involved, I would be tempted to go for something that survived into BR livery like a LNER J6 or some of the GWR classes (is there a model of a Saint?) etc.
Barry
If Rails, etc are listening . . . stay clear brave Sheffield chaps!
Bill
At 6'4'', Bill is a tall chap, then again, when horizontal he is rather long and people often used to trip over him! . . . and so a nickname was born :)
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Nigel
©Nigel C. Phillips
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I was aware that the Terriers appeared in BR livery - I was trying (poorly as it appears) to make the point that the J6 and others also survived beyond 1948 but have yet to make it into RTR form.
It always struck me as odd that some classes have been missed whilst others attracted multiple manufacturers. Especially when I see that the Prototype diesels are now being produced, despite, in some cases, being a class of 1!!
Barry
Shed dweller, Softie Southerner and Meglomaniac
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Nigel makes reference to models being secretly produced, as in the case of the Hornby Terrier. I wonder if this was in response to ongoing criticism regarding the amount of time from announcement to actual delivery. Much better if you can announce a new Terrier and have it in the shops within a matter of months to allay that criticism. I suspect this was the real reason for keeping it secret in this case. Unfortunately for Hornby, their plans were shattered when Rails unwittingly announced their plans to produce the same model under the impression that Hornby were content to keep knocking out their old ex-Dapol model.
With reference to the big manufacturers owning the factories in China, actually Bachmann do, or to be more precise, the factory owns Bachmann! Bachmann was taken over by the Chinese company Kader in 1984.
I think that the reason the prototype diesels are being produced is simply that all of the diesels have been produced in model form. After all, there really weren't that many when compared to the steam classes. It appears to me that industrial steam locos are now finding favour with the manufacturers, despite many classes of company locos having never been produced. This probably brings me full circle to my first paragraph. There's money to be made in making models of the previously ignored small industrial locos.
Terry
Last edit: by col.stephens
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Kader Industries, the owner of Bachmann, is Chinese owned, registered in Bermuda. They used to have a factory in Hong Kong.
Different approach over here, let the punters know it's coming, take reservations, place a firm order. Which is why it's often impossible to get a new model without reserving.
The current Hornby Terrier must be selling well to have kept the new model development secret. Must be (expensive) new tooling. Bet the current batch of Terriers is the last while the stocks are cleared. And that the Rails and Hornby models are going to be produced in the same factory, which is how it all came to light. Chinese walls in this case being transparent.
Nigel
©Nigel C. Phillips
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I believe the Hornby Terrier must have sold well. I have two and at £80 or thereabouts, and £30 cheaper than the rails version, an absolute bargain.
Terry
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Bit more communication between UK manufacturers regarding their schedules would prevent these issues.
Nigel
©Nigel C. Phillips
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