This is exactly the sort of thing that made me post this thread in the first place. There has been a fair bit of interesting discussion so far, but to lay claims of "ripping off" other companies and not substantiate it with anything is doing nothing more than feeding the massive amount of rhetoric that is already out there.
I have supported my original point with direct evidence. Others have quoted from first-hand experience, and others have simply provided interesting discussion on the merits/follies of capitalist markets. That's all good...
I'm sort of curious as to the arguement about "if the design is the same, but the product is built with inferior components, then the final product will somehow be inferior." The logic here is obvious, and of course, valid. I have two questions, though....
1. ARE the components used in Behringer products REALLY inferior to any other mass-marketed product (ie. Mackie, etc.)? (inherent in this question would also be whether they were measurably inferior, or which/how many components, and thus, how relevant would these inferior components be to the final product?
example....designing a computer: One computer uses an inferior ATX tower/case to another design. End result = negligible difference in final product quality, and even then, not related in any way to the product's ultimate performance. One computer using an inferior motherboard/processor combo.... that's a whole other ball of wax.
2. How far does the word "design" actually apply to the final product? If a company designs a mixer, would they simply say "put an op amp here," or would it be more specific and go so far as to say "put a 4580 op amp here and connect it with such and such materials in such and such a way?" The differences here, simply in the definition of "design" are extremely significant. If it was ME designing something, I would like to be as specific as possible, but I'm not an electronics engineer.
Unfortunately, as relevant to question 2, I have come across no data to suggest how far the definition of "design" actually went in the Mackie vs. Behringer case.
Chris