Hootbro
Well-Known Member
I can see it in the analog days before JIT (Just In Time) inventory controls came in. Today though, that would be way inefficient for factory scheduling to push customer custom orders before dealer stock and fleet orders that are way easier to plan around.Don't have doubts. In the 70's and 80's orders were written , and sent to the manufacturer. Units that were getting built for a dealer customer went right in to be built. We received some units in as little as 6 weeks. Some express orders, we could see in 4 weeks. All depended on what and where they were being built. The 90's when orders were sent by the computer , things began to slow up due to the increase in order volume. I worked in the auto industry for 34 years, at the zone level and dealer level, hell you could even call the factory back then to check on an order and maybe get it faster. I retired in 2011, so I'm not familiar with the ordering now.
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