Snowblower Forum banner
141 - 160 of 339 Posts
i thought some of the toro's had brigs engines, i swear i seen one with a 1650 series on it, that i thought was made in america?
At one time Toro's used to use American made Briggs engine right now they are about the least made in America machine since the engines are made in China by Loncin and the snowblower bodies are made in Mexico. Briggs no longer makes any more small engines in the USA they are now manufactured in China. Even the worst of the worst MTD's snowblower bodies are still made here in the USA.
 
Discussion starter · #144 ·
so what about the polar force engines in the ariens? that american or no?
For current models, no.

As of last winter, all 2-stage snowblowers, by all manufacturers (except Honda) have engines made in China.
there are no longer new 2-stage snowblower engines being made in the USA.
You can still find NOS US-made engines out there though.

Scot
 
Maybe the body panels came from overseas too and were simply bolted together here. :eek:
 
"Made in" versus "Assembled in"

Some clarification regarding the difference between "Made in" and "Assembled in" here: http://nationalstandardparts.com/documents/AssembledvsMadeinUSA.pdf

Here's a summary of what it says:

REQUIREMENT FOR “MADE IN USA” CLAIMS
“A product advertised as Made in USA be must be ‘all or virtually all’ made in the U.S.“
WHAT DOES ‘ALL OR VIRTUALLY ALL” MEAN?
“All or virtually all means that all significant parts and processing that go into the product must be of U.S.
origin. That is, the product should contain no — or negligible — foreign content. The policy goes on to
clarify that a ‘product that is all or virtually all made in the United States will ordinarily be one in which all
significant parts and processing that go into the product are of U.S. origin.”

REQUIREMENT FOR “ASSEMBLED IN USA” CLAIMS
“A product that includes foreign components may be called ‘Assembled in USA’ without qualification when
its principal assembly takes place in the U.S. and the assembly is substantial. For the ‘assembly’ claim to be
valid, the product’s last ‘substantial transformation’ also should have occurred in the U.S.”
Example: A lawn mower, composed of all domestic parts except for the cable sheathing, flywheel, wheel
rims and air filter (15 to 20 percent foreign content) is assembled in the U.S. An “Assembled in USA” claim
is appropriate.
Example: All the major components of a computer, including the motherboard and hard drive, are
imported. The computer’s components then are put together in a simple “screwdriver” operation in the
U.S., are not substantially transformed under the Customs Standard, and must be marked with a foreign
country of origin. An “Assembled in U.S.” claim without further qualification is deceptive.
 
Maybe this will clear up the confusion:

Made in China
or Product of China (simplified Chinese: 中国制造; traditional Chinese: 中國製造; pinyin: zhōngguó zhìzào, sometimes Made in P.R.C.) is a country of origin label affixed to products manufactured in China (excluding Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan).
Made in China is actually used for the products from Mainland China, governed by the People's Republic of China (PRC). Although the name China is used by both the People's Republic of China and the Republic of China (ROC), the label "Made in China" is generally affixed to products made in the former. Products made in the ROC do not use the "Made in China" label. Rather, they usually use "Made in Taiwan", "Made in ROC" or "Made in Taiwan, ROC"[1][2]
A series of highly publicized scandals involving faulty products exported from China in recent years has harmed the "Made in China" brand abroad, as 40% of product recalls in the United States were of imports from China.[4] In response to these concerns, Chinese officials have pledged to increase safety inspections for manufactured products and encouraged the proliferation of watchdog journalism to hold "rogue producers" accountable.[5] Nevertheless, new scandals continue to surface. Despite the recent scandals, most consumers do not "consistently check for the country of origin label", and there is little brand awareness for Chinese products in particular.[4] The "Made in China" brand was historically challenged by the US-led Cold War media campaigns that reported negatively on the brand and publicized hearings on the security of Chinese products in the United States Congress.[6] Conversely, some advertising companies and the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai have since the late 1990s endeavored to shed the Made in China brand of its "cheap and junky" image, as the Made in Japan brand had done.[6]
There is criticism in the United States that Chinese manufacturing firms compete unfairly due to the advantages of state support, copyright infringements, and governmental manipulation of the yuan, which propagates the "Made in China" brand at the cost of lost American jobs.[7][8]
 
If the product says assembled in China, made in China, made in Paki, made in mehico, made anywhere but U.S. there's a very good chance I'll not buy it. This little tablet probably wasn't made in usa. Just me. I just bought a snow hand plow made in U.S.A.
 
I believe in Canadian made too, but when you compare the 2 products of equal performance and the chinese one is 50% cheaper it's really hard to keep buying canadian when you can get it for half price. I'm not a rich man. Lately I needed 20 stainless steel bolts 40mm M8 with lock washers, washers and flange nuts. Local canadian made would cost me $86 and I had to drive there to get them. Had them delivered to my house for $29Cnd for exact same grade 304 stainless.
 
I believe in Canadian made too, but when you compare the 2 products of equal performance and the chinese one is 50% cheaper it's really hard to keep buying canadian when you can get it for half price. I'm not a rich man. Lately I needed 20 stainless steel bolts 40mm M8 with lock washers, washers and flange nuts. Local canadian made would cost me $86 and I had to drive there to get them. Had them delivered to my house for $29Cnd for exact same grade 304 stainless.
I have a good friend who used to be in the trades. He's now a missionary to Mongolia. He says you can buy tools there that are exact copies of U.S. tools, brand names with the same weight, same logo, same colors.... They last no time a'tall. He says they're junk. They come from china. I'm a little leery of their products. Those sandals that were burning holes in people's feet. Bad dog food.. Etc. Toxic paint in toys....
As I said, it's just a choice with me.
 
I'm in the automotive trade, and am seeing more and more stickers from Mexico.

On everything from hard parts to electronic modules.
You betcha! They'll run anywhere and everywhere to save a buck or two. I remember changing a burnt out light on my 2005 Harley (remember, the great american machine?) I pulled it out and it had "Made in Bulgaria" written on it. No joke.
 
141 - 160 of 339 Posts