britechguy
Well-Known Member
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I have very little doubt that the SSD manufacturing market, like the HDD market, is but a precious few actual manufacturers with many of the brands contracting to them.
There is no way I believe this wikipedia article in terms of "actual manufacture" just based on what's marked as "made in" on the drives I've already used. If I'm not mistaken, most, if not all of them, carried a "Made in China" designation, regardless of the home country of the actual company selling them under its name.
And it's almost certain that many different brands are, in actuality, precisely the same unit with the correct "brand sticker" attached. That's been the case in a very great many market segments, automotive being another example, where the number of actual manufacturing plants is far fewer than the number of brands for a given component. The brands all contract to spec, and the manufacturers only need to meet that spec, but if they exceed it because they're using the same unit for multiple brands, that's no problem. You just can't supply something that does not meet the spec you've agreed to manufacture to. If it not only meets it, but exceeds it, you can ship out what already comes off your line.
There is no way I believe this wikipedia article in terms of "actual manufacture" just based on what's marked as "made in" on the drives I've already used. If I'm not mistaken, most, if not all of them, carried a "Made in China" designation, regardless of the home country of the actual company selling them under its name.
And it's almost certain that many different brands are, in actuality, precisely the same unit with the correct "brand sticker" attached. That's been the case in a very great many market segments, automotive being another example, where the number of actual manufacturing plants is far fewer than the number of brands for a given component. The brands all contract to spec, and the manufacturers only need to meet that spec, but if they exceed it because they're using the same unit for multiple brands, that's no problem. You just can't supply something that does not meet the spec you've agreed to manufacture to. If it not only meets it, but exceeds it, you can ship out what already comes off your line.