Just In Time and its corollary concepts brought amazing efficiencies to global manufacturing for decades and enabled cost reductions that we now take for granted.  I know that first hand ... I was the operations manager for a large division of a major semiconductor company for many years.  I think it is exceedingly lame to denigrate the entire concept because a once-in-a century global pandemic brought the world supply chain to its knees.  It's not only JIT adherents that are running out of parts, and I'd bet that the contractual relationships that major JIT manufacturers have with their suppliers means that they are going to get their parts before the ones who don't.  Who do you think is going to get components first ... Elecraft or Hewlett-Packard?

It's crazy how some people try to use an aberration to justify a reactionary bias.

Dave   AB7E



On 10/18/2021 4:24 PM, James Driskell wrote:
Unfortunately, the "Just In Time" concept that many US manufacturers have built their 
businesses around never considered the "you're never going to get it" approach that we 
now see.  I hope someone is taking a hard look at our national resource network because if the 
balloon goes up, we're going to have a hard time cranking up the domestic supply chain to meet our 
basic needs.  We probably won't have the luxury of being able to take our time to get it running.

Jim W7OWI


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