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Quality Control At The Mint Stinks.

16 posts in this topic

I think the mint's quality control is extremely strong 893whatthe.gif! How many other companies manufacturer goods at the rate of BILLIONS per year - with such a low incidental rate of defective merchandise confused.gif?

 

James

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I think the mint's quality control is extremely strong 893whatthe.gif! How many other companies manufacturer goods at the rate of BILLIONS per year - with such a low incidental rate of defective merchandise confused.gif?

 

James

 

Yea, verily.

 

And how many manufacturers have their defective merchandise so prized by consumers?

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I think the mint's quality control is extremely strong 893whatthe.gif! How many other companies manufacturer goods at the rate of BILLIONS per year - with such a low incidental rate of defective merchandise confused.gif?

 

James

 

Yea, verily.

 

And how many manufacturers have their defective merchandise so prized by consumers?

 

Ford, GM, Chevrolet...

 

Hoot

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I think the mint's quality control is extremely strong 893whatthe.gif! How many other companies manufacturer goods at the rate of BILLIONS per year - with such a low incidental rate of defective merchandise confused.gif?

 

James

 

Yea, verily.

 

And how many manufacturers have their defective merchandise so prized by consumers?

 

Ford, GM, Chevrolet...

 

Hoot

 

Can you imagine resellers charging a premium on a GM truck with misaligned fenders, a defective tranny, or something else? Maybe GM can get into the vehicle error market to boost profits. 893scratchchin-thumb.gif

 

QC at the Mint is actually pretty good. You should see some other countries' coins (die cracks, cuds, off-center strikes, etc.).

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I think the mint's quality control is extremely strong 893whatthe.gif! How many other companies manufacturer goods at the rate of BILLIONS per year - with such a low incidental rate of defective merchandise confused.gif?

 

James

 

Yea, verily.

 

And how many manufacturers have their defective merchandise so prized by consumers?

 

Ford, GM, Chevrolet...

 

Hoot

 

Can you imagine resellers charging a premium on a GM truck with misaligned fenders, a defective tranny, or something else? Maybe GM can get into the vehicle error market to boost profits. 893scratchchin-thumb.gif

 

Happens every day! 893whatthe.gif They just don't call them "errors." makepoint.gif

 

Perhaps if the TPGs would begin to slab vehicles, they'd increase in value. 27_laughing.gif

 

Hoot

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Scotts post is is right on target about the QC problem at the mint.All they need to do is hire me to fix the problem.

 

Yeah, but we wouldn't want to see you in a Federal pen for taking them. Well....um.....er..... 893scratchchin-thumb.gif.......nah!

 

Chris

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I'd buy them not take them!!!

 

You can't! It's against the law. Do you still want to work for the Mint? Just think.......you'd have to sit there all day long and see all of those errors go into the recycle bin. frustrated.giffrustrated.giffrustrated.gif

 

Chris

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Actually many companies (i.e. Medical Device manufacturers) produce more complex products than coins with high process capabilities (CPk's) of one defect per 10,000,000 or more.

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