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Chris Soucy June 1st, 2008 05:34 PM

B & H Catalogue - What a Gem!
 
My long forgotten love afair with printed catalogues has just been re - awakened by the appearance in my post box last week of the Winter 2007/ 2008 B & H Catalogue.

[I know this is old news, but it seems that for Asia/ Pacific they're first shipped to Colombo in Sri Lanka, then trans shipped onwards from there. Obviously very slow boats to China etc etc. Very pretty stamps, however. Oh, 115, I presume Rupees, postage from Colombo]

Anyway, I still haven't managed to get through it from cover to cover (no time) but what a mine of information it truly is.

Oh, and the photographs! For all those of you who only trawl the WWW and are hooked on those low res, fuzzy and always too small piccies on the average web site, this thing is truly a revelation.

The gear! There's stuff in this thing I didn't even know existed till now. I'm gonna have to do sommat pretty serious to keep my credit card out of trouble.

For all you newbies out there, get a copy of this thing. It shows samples of just about any video gear you're ever likely to need or want more clearly than anything I've discovered on - line.

It isn't a listing of everything B & H do, seems to be a pretty good subset to whet your appetite, but still comes in about the same thickness as the Dunedin phone directory (for the many thousands of you who've seen one!).

Does make me think that B & H really should up their game in the on - line photo department tho', the ones in the catalogue just scream "buy me", the ones on the web site just sort of say "whassat?"

Hook on and sign up for this thing - it's even FREE!


* The author has not been paid, bribed, threatened or otherwise coerced into writing the above, he just loves printed catalogues.

** The author may be a tad sad, however, and needs to get out more.


CS



115 Sri Lankan Rupees = $1.06 US, no wonder they post 'em from there!

Henry Posner June 2nd, 2008 07:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chris Soucy (Post 886808)
My long forgotten love afair with printed catalogues has just been re - awakened by the appearance in my post box last week of the Winter 2007/ 2008 B & H Catalogue.

[I know this is old news, but it seems that for Asia/ Pacific they're first shipped to Colombo in Sri Lanka, then trans shipped onwards from there. Obviously very slow boats to China etc etc. Very pretty stamps, however.

Thanks. I'm sorry delivery is so slow. If you want something more current, you can view the current catalogues in pdf format at http://www.bhphotovideo.com/find/FreeCatalog.jsp

Paul Mailath June 2nd, 2008 03:20 PM

I got mine over a month ago - I agree it's great to have hands on stuff - a great toilet read except I need a pen to circle all the things I want to get.

Josh Bass June 2nd, 2008 05:00 PM

What's the philosophy behind not simply listing the price for everything? Why do so many items say "call for price?"

Chris Soucy June 2nd, 2008 05:30 PM

Hi Josh..........
 
The inside of the front cover tells that particular story.

With the gyrations of the US$ against the Yen, Yuan etc etc I would imagine a great many of the prices would be out of date before the ink was dry.

In my case, watching the NZ$ yo - yo against the US$ gives me ample opportunity to "strike whilst the iron is hot" and get a bargain when the NZ$ takes off for the stratosphere (with absolutely no visible means of support, I may add - er, the kiwi dollar, not me).

Henry:-

Yeah, I've checked the PDF's, definately better than the Web site, BUT, doing a direct comparison between the PDF and the printed catalogue, the catalogue has the prize for clarity and detail (of pictures) by a country mile.

The PDF's just don't have that extra zing.


CS

Josh Bass June 2nd, 2008 06:55 PM

Are you saying the prices fluctuate? Even US prices?

Chris Soucy June 2nd, 2008 07:26 PM

Hi...........
 
Reckon so. If the US$ drops through the floor against the currency of the manufactureing country, then the prices (in the US) must go up. And vice versa.

CS

Josh Bass June 2nd, 2008 08:01 PM

This must affect only items above a certain price point, or only certain items, since some stuff DOES have listed prices.

Greg Boston June 2nd, 2008 08:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Josh Bass (Post 887373)
What's the philosophy behind not simply listing the price for everything? Why do so many items say "call for price?"

There's often an imposed limit on advertised prices by the manufacturer. "email me a better price" and "call for price" are ways to sell an item below that imposed limit.

The other part of the philosophy is that it keeps the competition from easily assessing what you're selling things for.

-gb-

Niall Chadwick June 3rd, 2008 02:14 AM

Its a real pity that B&H dont have a european based store. What a bonus that would be for the non-americans among us.

Ill be keeping my fingers crossed :)

Henry Posner June 3rd, 2008 09:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Josh Bass (Post 887419)
Are you saying the prices fluctuate? Even US prices?

It's a quarterly catalogue. You bet prices fluctuate! And, in some cases we may not advertise our selling price if it's below MAP. Some companies limit what we can say in those circumstances. Also, rather than advertise a price so high no one would buy the item, we'd rather ask you to contact us for the current real price.

We appreciate that this is sometimes an inconvenience and we do what we can to keep inconveniences to a minimum.

Chris Soucy June 4th, 2008 01:03 AM

Hi Niall.............
 
Whereabouts in Chelmsford? Know it well (used to have a long term girlfriend there [luckily, never became a very expensive ex - wife!]).

Is there a reason (apart from UK import duties etc) you can't use New York?

If B & H was ever to set up a European hub, London would be the obvious choice I guess, but one heck of an expensive leap into the unknown, and there's always Jessops to take into account.

They aren't doing all that well 'cos of the cheapies available on - line, and even I stopped shopping there for that very reason. The specialist retail sector in London is a bit of a disaster if you're heavilly discounting (which B&H can) due to the rents.

I'll let Henry answer the bottom line.


CS

Niall Chadwick June 4th, 2008 02:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chris Soucy (Post 888093)
Whereabouts in Chelmsford? Know it well (used to have a long term girlfriend there [luckily, never became a very expensive ex - wife!]).

Is there a reason (apart from UK import duties etc) you can't use New York?

If B & H was ever to set up a European hub, London would be the obvious choice I guess, but one heck of an expensive leap into the unknown, and there's always Jessops to take into account.

They aren't doing all that well 'cos of the cheapies available on - line, and even I stopped shopping there for that very reason. The specialist retail sector in London is a bit of a disaster if you're heavilly discounting (which B&H can) due to the rents.

I'll let Henry answer the bottom line.


CS

Over near Chelmer Village. How is life in New Zealand? Last time I was there was back in the 80s. Before Lord of the Rings ever touched it :)

I can use the New York branch. I guess its just hassle factor that Im referring to, and postage costs, and the old import duties as you mentioned.

Mike Beckett June 4th, 2008 02:48 AM

Chris,

Europe badly needs a B&H equivalent! There are some stores that come close, but none of them have the sheer range of B&H.

I won't use B&H because of import taxes and duties, as well as shipping. I could make considerable savings, but do you take the risk of it slipping through the customs without them noticing? I tend not to be that lucky!

Jessops is (in my opinion) dreadful now from the video point of view. I used to use the Belfast store in the early 1990s and it was pretty good, lots of video camera gear (although nothing stellar - never any pro or semi pro ranges) and knowledgable staff. Now it's all point & click digital stills cameras and not much else - but they are pretty good at that side of things.

Of course, the UK is a much smaller market than the USA, so anything this side of the pond would definitely need to be a Europe-wide business.

Chris Soucy June 5th, 2008 12:54 AM

Hi Niall and Mike..............
 
Niall:

Yep, know where you're coming from. Chelmer Village? Hmm, not on my radar.

The EU/ UK duties etc are a complete pain in the proverbials, but even with those, it makes economic sense to use external sources if the cost is high enough and the savings good enough.

Mike:

Yeah, Jessops just seemed to go into free - fall sometime in the late 80's (I left the UK in the late 80's to travel, didn't really get back till the mid/ late 90's) by which time it seemed to have gone into terminal decline.

The last time I went into one of their stores (New Oxford Street, in London) none of the staff knew squat about anything and the entire place seemed to have lost the will to live, quite frankly.

Having given the whole situation some more grey cell time, I reckon London is probably the worst place to site such a store (if anyone was going to do it, which I doubt).

Not sure just where the "perfect location" would be, but the centre of the EU sounds good - now, just where, exactly, IS THAT?

Prague? Paris? Munich?

I don't know.

Don't anybody dare say Brussels, that's a complete no - no

Suggestions, anyone?


CS


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