> "Jim Faughn" <jfau...@socket.net> writes: > I've wondered why Jeanette wasn't interested in the possible > sale/transfer or whatever you would want to call it, of the > business. --(snip)-- > can make the assumption that the profit in the worst case > is in the range of $20-30,000. Next figure this is her retirement > income and determine what investment it would take to > replace this. Just for fun, lets agree on 25,000 per year.
Mr. Faughn has presented the best overview of the situation, IMHO. So for the frustrated would-be-Buyers of RR Engineering, perhaps a compromise position would work ? Think of =Distributor=. To keep this simple ( absent the ergos, to whits, et al) let's call the Distributership "Acme Airplanes" ( or AA ). AA sets itself up as =a= Single Point for the KR- airplane. ( Not "the only", just "a" source... ) AA re-sells KR- plans that it buys from RR. AA re-sells KR- parts that it buys from RR. AA re-sells KR- parts that it buys from Diehl. AA re-sells KR- parts that it buys from whomever. AA re-sells wood kits that it packages from wood bought from Aircraft Spruce, Wicks, Hermans Logging, et al. AA may even make a few parts ( metal parts kits ?) itself, and sells them. AA might make and sell pre-assembled wood spar kits, and fuselage boats pre-assembled in AA's climate controlled and clean-room assembly facility. AA could put together all the components of the airplane and sell them in Groups --- ie, Tail Group, Fuselage, Wing Kit, Engine and FWF Kit, Finishing Kit. ( a la RV ). AA does all the whiz-bang advertising and promoting that RR does not now do. etc. Simple, limited liability, good prospect to promote the airplane, and probably a lot of fun for the AA personnel. High-profit for AA ? Whooops, maybe not... but "making a killing" and "promoting the airplane" are not the same. As far as the Intellectual Property angle and "Rights", promise ( and keep that promise !) to buy enough from RR so as to not compromise her present position. AA is a loose Partner, not a competitior. Offering Mrs. Ken such a broader-based stability that the Open Market does not may influence her to (gladly ? ) participate. This IMHO, and YMMV. Another $0.02 food-for-thought. Art Cacella 1970 American AA-1 N6155L "Dinkie" 1972 KR-1 Plans, still not started <sigh> ( but four metal homebuilts underway ) Winston-Salem, NC ________________________________________________________________ The best thing to hit the Internet in years - Juno SpeedBand! Surf the Web up to FIVE TIMES FASTER! Only $14.95/ month - visit www.juno.com to sign up today!