Quote 114jwh (Vancouver)
" You're right - I believe the BD design was around longer here than in the US. It seems like over the years Inglis took much longer to catch up to their counterparts in the US in terms of design changes. However, they rarely ever show up around here on places like Craigslist etc so I don't know that many more are still around. "
Inglis is a branch plant in many respects like a lot of Canadian companies of that era pre free trade.
Inglis is much smaller and the Canadian market it 1/10 the size of the US market with high tariffs to keep foreign made equipment out.
So peculiar was the Canadian market that in a round about way companies that are rivals in the USA might be cooperatively making the consumer goods in Canada sold under different names.
There are many fine examples of US made tooling being sent to Canada to continue to produce something that the US parent no longer makes...
Coleman stopped making table lamps in the USA in the 40s I think, but the production line continued to make them in Canada until 1970.
And parts were stamped in Brass unlike more modern tooling in Kansas where lanterns were all steel...
Buffalo stopped making this particular drill press in the USA probably in the 50s.
But Canadian blower and forge continued to make them into the 70s for Canada, just because it was cheaper.
Or rather cheaper for the manufacturer, but not so much the consumer.
The reason it was cheaper is the price to consumer was higher.
No incentive to modernize means old designs and tooling will continue to make an old product for a captive market..
Other notable old products, the last Studebakers were made in Hamilton out of left over parts..
D series Lawnboys made at the OMC plant into the 80s
PL Robertson screws and screw drivers that no one was interested in just about any place else...
Thanks to free trade.
We have new and cheap products just like everyone else but made in other countries
The real lesson of Inglis is not that is made washing machines.
Its that for political reasons it made washing machines in peace time so it could manufacture small arms in war...
http://vintagemachinery.org/photoindex/detail.aspx?id=13477