1 thing: in 1977-78, at their peak, the average EE salary was $15,500/yr. Both of these companies had only 3-4 employees, the the tech/assemblers were making about $8,000/yr. I know of 4 "big" Polyfusion modulars. I don't think they sold that many small ones/individual modules. I heard that Aries sold most of theirs in the first 10 months, but the circuitry was pretty lame (my friend and I bought their kits in about 1977). Lots of DC offsets (pops/clicks), the filter was so-so (basically a ARP clone). Little repeat business. The "buzz" on the street was so-so. Like I said, I wonder if there is ever a way to ever know. I *do* know (straight from the horse's mouth) the Moog sold "just over" 10,000 modules in a 11 year span. Paul S. will try like hell to squeeze the mixer in -----Original Message----- From: Elhardt@... <Elhardt@...> To: motm@onelist.com <motm@onelist.com> Date: Friday, October 29, 1999 1:41 AM Subject: Re: [motm] Quick update (Numbers Shipped) >From: Elhardt@... > > >(Paul Schreiber) writes: >>>Currently around customer #77, and after next week module #600. I am >betting (with zero data to back me, just gut feel) that this is about what >Polyfusion or Aries shipped in their lifetime.<< > >I myself have always wondered how much Polyfusion or Aries (and others) >modular equipment sold. But looking at the Polyfusion and Aries pricelists I >have, and doing a little math, they had to have shipped more that 600 modules >each. > >Average Polyfusion module price ~$300 x 600 = $180,000 >Average Aries module price ~$150 x 600 = $90,000 >The actual profit would be lower than the above figures of course. But you >could add to that some additional income from cases and keyboards, say >another 30%. All in all, gross sales of between $117,000 and $234,000 for >several years in business, doesn't sound like enough sales to generate enough >profit/income to pay a couple of employees for a year. That would also mean >that the picture of this Polyfusion (http://www.synthfool.com/jbpoly6.jpg) >has about 1/5 of the world's Polyfusion modules. Not too likely. I wonder >if the current incarnation of Polyfusion would even reveal how many they sold >back then. > >>>Other non-MOTM commitments will delay the mixer....to early 1st quarter >next year<< > >argh.. The much needed Mixer delayed ! > >>>The next milestone is customer #100/module #1000 >(curious to see which one gets there first).<< > >Expect another instant order for at least 10 more modules as soon as the >Mixer gets here. Eventual long term goal is an MOTM system close to the size >of the above pictured Polyfusion (Maybe some Modcan thrown in too). > >>
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Re: Quick update (Numbers Shipped)
1999-10-29 by Paul Schreiber
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