New Alternator Installed - Thanks for the tips

Russell

Active member
Jan 2, 2017
357
88
28
Dunedin, Florida
Thank you everyone for the helpful tips on installing my alternator. The install was easier than expected. (how often can you say that with a GMC
Motorhome?)

They say, without pictures it didn't happen. So here they are.
http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/g7196-replacing-the-alternator.html

Thank you, and Happy New Year!
--
Russell Keith,
1978 Eleganza II "Harry" 403, Danny Dunn Tranny (w/shift kit, 3.50 sprockets, Allison), Thorley, Stock Brakes w/Remote Vacuum Brake Booster, Dakota
Digital Dash, 6.5kW Onan, Dunedin, Florida
 
That is interesting. Every one that I have seen said rebuilt in Mexico. Oh well nothing stays the same for ever. China it is.
--
Ken Burton - N9KB
76 Palm Beach
Hebron, Indiana
 
Bruce, I'm told that $3 Large will ship a container pretty much anyplace with a port. You can stuff a LOT of chinese alternators in one. When
the shipping cost over and back is $.50 a unit and the build labor and parts are half those in the US, chinese rebuild makes economic sense. As to
qwuality, you get what you pay for :)

--johnny

--
Foolish Carriage, 76 26' Eleganza(?) with beaucoup mods and add - ons.
Braselton, Ga.
"I forgive them all, save those who hurt the dogs. They must answer to me in hell" - ol Andy, paraphrased
 
Last edited by a moderator:
> Amazing that they can haul it half-way around the world and back and still rebuild it for cheaper cost than doing it here.
>

Afaik, the chinese gov is subsidizing chinese post office.

Otherwise it would not be possible to buy some small USB doo dad for
2USD-3USD, with free shipping, and having it in your hands within a week.

--
Best regards

Peer Oliver Schmidt
PGP KeyID: 0x4196BF22
'76a 26' Eleganza II - Virginia, US
'73 23' Sequoia - Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
 
The issue is shipping to the USA is not as cheap as to China. About half the containers go back to China empty.

Dolph Santorine

DE AD0LF

Wheeling, West Virginia

1977 ex-Palm Beach TZE167V100820
Sullybuilt Bags, Reaction Arms, Manny Transmission

>

>> Amazing that they can haul it half-way around the world and back and still rebuild it for cheaper cost than doing it here.
>>
>
> Afaik, the chinese gov is subsidizing chinese post office.
>
> Otherwise it would not be possible to buy some small USB doo dad for
> 2USD-3USD, with free shipping, and having it in your hands within a week.
>
> --
> Best regards
>
> Peer Oliver Schmidt
> PGP KeyID: 0x4196BF22
> '76a 26' Eleganza II - Virginia, US
> '73 23' Sequoia - Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
>
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://list.gmcnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gmclist_list.gmcnet.org
 
That's one of the disputes Trump's having with China right now: He's
abrogated the postal agreement which allows them to ship us things prepaid
from China for less than an empty envelope costs to mail across the US via
USPS.

That will hurt our pocketbooks, but is still only fair to our workers.

Ken H.

On Tue, Jan 1, 2019 at 10:04 AM Peer Oliver Schmidt
wrote:

> > Amazing that they can haul it half-way around the world and back and
> still rebuild it for cheaper cost than doing it here.
> >
>
> Afaik, the chinese gov is subsidizing chinese post office.
>
> Otherwise it would not be possible to buy some small USB doo dad for
> 2USD-3USD, with free shipping, and having it in your hands within a week.
>
> --
> Best regards
>
> Peer Oliver Schmidt
> PGP KeyID: 0x4196BF22
> '76a 26' Eleganza II - Virginia, US
> '73 23' Sequoia - Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
>
>
 
The postal agreement was signed in 1844. China was a 4th World nation. Things have changed quite a bit.

Empty containers do not return to China. Chinese economics on these, it is cheaper to build an new one than to return an empty one. If you live near a
port with International shipping, empties are everywhere. Here, in Lower Alabama, you can have an empty 40ft delivered to your site and placed for
around $2000. You cannot build anything of that size for that money. Pretty secure also. Local builder just assembled a fast food cluster of 40
footers.

Ask Ken H. about the utility of his 40 footer.

Tom
--
2012 Phoenix Cruiser model 2552
KA4CSG
 
I have bought a few things from China and the quality has changed in the last few years.
It is quite good now.
For a while you could order good brake rotors, and for a few dollars less, you could get not so good brake rotors. Most people went for the cheaper
ones then complained about quality.
 
When I first moved to Salem, Oregon in 1958, I went to work as a busboy in
a large Chinese Restaurant. Owned and operated by Chinese immigrants from
Hong Kong. They treated me very well, and some of them became life long
acquaintances. They stated extreme dislike for the Communists, and said
that was the primary reason they left China. They were great cooks, and
taught me a lot about food service. But, alternator rebuilding was NOT one
of their strong suits. I don't think that has improved a great deal. I use
a local rebuilder, who uses USA manufactured parts in their rebuilds. I
have very few problems with their stuff.
Jim Hupy
Salem, Or

> I have bought a few things from China and the quality has changed in the
> last few years.
> It is quite good now.
> For a while you could order good brake rotors, and for a few dollars less,
> you could get not so good brake rotors. Most people went for the cheaper
> ones then complained about quality.
>
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://list.gmcnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gmclist_list.gmcnet.org
>
 
I have a one time use container here that I use a garage for my John Deere and Zero turn mower. It has doors on both ends. It cost me $2200
delivered from one of the ports in Chicago. Mine was made in Denmark and used once. It was like new when I received it. It was never painted with
any company logo and the doors one end were never opened since it left the factory.

The deal on the mail is by international agreement. The origination country set the rates, collects, and keeps the money while the destination
country has to receive it at a postal customs facility in their country and deliver it from there for free. The arrangement assumes the mail
traveling the other way is handled similarly so it all balances out money wise in the end.

Most of the small light weight stuff travels as air freight on already flying passenger planes. Bigger / heavier postal items have to travel air or
surface freight which raises their cost but the rates and transport times are still set by the originating country.

Heavy items are usually not shipped by postal services but by freight / shipping companies which is a completely different system.

A lot of countries use the postal service as a revenue generator and set the rates high. A few do the opposite and set the rates low or subsidize the
operation encourage exports.

--
Ken Burton - N9KB
76 Palm Beach
Hebron, Indiana