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Stick to the "Major" manufactures... a good way to tell which ones they are is to ask if they are, "a consumers digest best buy?" This is a purchased award, but the big players that can afford to buy the award, can afford to service their product.
The same can not be said for its doppelganger, Consumers Digest. Like CR, CD puts out a regular report with “best buy” recommendations of certain vehicles. Like CR, the CD publication runs no advertising, but instead of relying on consumer subscriptions, CD has a very different source of revenue: licensing its awards for advertising purposes. As an example, the WSJ points out that GM received no fewer than 15 CD “Best Buy” awards, and GM has paid the magazine to use those ads in its marketing and advertising efforts. Though GM refused to reveal how much it paid CD to license its 2010 awards, but CD says the traditional fee is $35k for the first award and $25k for each award thereafter.Of course, CD swears that this troubling business model in no way affects the decision to award “Best Buy” kudos to a given manufacturer. Editor Rich Dzierwa tells the WSJ that there isno pressure on the editorial staff to consider products, to consider vehicles because either they have been licensees or because there is a possibility that they will be. Licensing comes after our review processOf course there’s evidence that this isn’t the whole story, namely that CD’s award page lists all winners of its “Best Buy” award but only offers links with further information for models that have paid CD licensing fees.Not that GM is sweating the appearance of being the major benefactor of an award mill. GM executive director of marketing Paul Edwards tells the WSJ:We had done some research in terms of what resonates [with consumers] and what doesn’t, and Consumers Digest scores near the topNow, why would that be? Would it be because Consumers Digest is widely available and read by millions? Not likely, considering the WSJ’s revelation that CDhas no subscribers, runs no ads and is only available in certain bookstores and retail shopsCould this under-earned “resonance with consumers” have something to do with the fact that the name “Consumers Digest” sounds incredibly similar to the name “Consumer Reports,” possibly the best-known source of reliability and quality data in the country? There sure isn’t an overabundance of alternate explanations.
First post and BUMPING an old thread:Seems no one in this thread had any comment as of yet on Spa Manufacturers on Ulmerton Rd in Clearwater, FL. I just stopped in and spoke with a salesman. He talked a good game but I'm very early into my research, so I have much to learn. The spa I looked at (OctoRound?) was quoted at around $4700 with a 20 year warranty on the tub and 10 years on the pump. The enclosure is cedar. They are acrylic and manufactured right there at their sales facility.Just wondering, as was the OP, if anyone has any personal experience with a tub from Spa Manufacturers in Clearwater, FL?TIA.FL Person
I bet you that warranty is prorated.
Never owned one, saw/repaired hundreds like it.