Super Turbo Deluxe Custom
Epic Member
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I've known for a while that many American made products are not 100% sourced in the U.S., but many questions about specifics arose after my latest bass head purchase. There is a lot of legalese in terms like Made in the USA, Assembled in the USA, American Made, 100% American Made, and Designed in the USA. Apparently automakers are the only ones legally required to define the percentage of domestically aquired parts. If other products make the claim, they are subject to the same regulations. With cars it's really tricky. Toyota and Nissan (as well as others) have plants in the U.S. and employ union labor. I've worked at the GM Assembly Plant in Arlington, TX. Semi trucks with Mexican license plates come in full and leave empty to make those vehicles in America. My American made Dodge came with Canadian Goodyears on it. A few years ago, a Toyota Sienna mini-van was made of 90% domestically aquired parts. A Ford Mustang, 60%. In this case buying American means buying Toyota? To add more confusion, buying a Volkswagen is about as American made, as far as parts and labor, as one can get. Sometimes the limitations are geographic with guitars. Rosewood can't be grown in the U.S. (possibly Hawaii). You just wouldn't expect to see a Rosewood or Mahogany tree growing in an Iowa corn field, so the idea of an American Standard Strat with Brazilian Rosewood fretboard doesn't seem odd, or an LP Standard with Honduran or African Mahogany.
Again, my latest Carvin bass head purchase sparked this curiousity. It's "Made in the USA." That was a source of pride, but if it were absurdly expensive or didn't sound good, no go. Anywho, I'm tinkering around with it and was considering a tube swap as a mod. To my surprise, the biggest indicator on my new 'Made in the USA" bass head's tube was the word "China." Now, I know Carvin is not in the tube making business and most of the ones out there are Chinese or Eastern European in origin. Even if they insisted on Made in the USA tubes, downstream their tube supplier might make their hypothetical American made tubes with Chinese metal and Mexican glass. Who knows?
The legal definition of "Made in the USA" according to Wiki says it must be 75% of the manufacturing costs must occur here or have been substantially transformed here last in the manufacturing process. Also, the idea (intellectual property) is a factor. Designed in the USA........?
Again, my latest Carvin bass head purchase sparked this curiousity. It's "Made in the USA." That was a source of pride, but if it were absurdly expensive or didn't sound good, no go. Anywho, I'm tinkering around with it and was considering a tube swap as a mod. To my surprise, the biggest indicator on my new 'Made in the USA" bass head's tube was the word "China." Now, I know Carvin is not in the tube making business and most of the ones out there are Chinese or Eastern European in origin. Even if they insisted on Made in the USA tubes, downstream their tube supplier might make their hypothetical American made tubes with Chinese metal and Mexican glass. Who knows?
The legal definition of "Made in the USA" according to Wiki says it must be 75% of the manufacturing costs must occur here or have been substantially transformed here last in the manufacturing process. Also, the idea (intellectual property) is a factor. Designed in the USA........?