:sunglasses: 50 % :laughing: 50 %
User avatar
By The Red Arrow
#502
Image

What's that, Sooty? "Useless, shameless, self-entitled, trough-slurping, pocket lining, verbally incontinent, duplicitous, doesn't give a shit about anything other than himself, psychopathic, egomaniac, fascistic cronyist lying racist prick and the morals of rabid hyena with the blood of hundreds of thousands on his grubby, grasping hands who would lose his job or liberty in any other walk of life" ?
Nigredo, Samanfur, davidjay and 1 others liked this
By davidjay
#606
Boiler wrote: Thu Apr 22, 2021 10:44 pm
Bones McCoy wrote: Thu Apr 22, 2021 4:46 pm [...] the ridiculous charges on overseas purchases
Repair to 'Mechatronic' unit (as used in ZF gearboxes) in Germany before 31/12/20: £500
Repair to 'Mechatronic' unit (as used in ZF gearboxes) in Germany after 31/12/20: £800

Ask me how I know this.
You bought a blue passport?
By MisterMuncher
#723
As to the great Japan trade deal, I was pricing up bike bits for my mate recently.

Shimano 105 group delivered from Wiggle to NI was £560
Same group delivered from Bike24 (DE) to ROI was €410. *

Turns out Japanese firms are going to continue distribution to UK via their extant EU subsidiaries and let the consumers deal with the costs rather than establish new lines of supply. I don't imagine consumer electronics and similar will be much different.


*Readers familiar with these suppliers will be aware that they are, in fact, the same bloody firm, and pre-Brexit their prices were functionally identical
By MisterMuncher
#734
In context, Ultegra is the next step up the ladder from 105 and ran about 600 quid before this present darkness. 105 used to come in around 350, but COVID squeezed the supply and pumped the demand. The situation is pretty similar for the similarly not freely traded with the UK wares of Campagnolo (Italy) and SRAM (US/Tiawan), so if you really a bike with gears in the next half decade, good fucking luck.

Thing is, it was UK firms like Wiggle and former rivals/current merger partners CRC that were keeping prices low worldwide. It wasn't unknown for Americans and Aussies to order from the UK and take their chances on local customs but still come out better off than buying locally. That's gone, and between that and the higher prices, UK cycle retail is probably fucked.
By Youngian
#735
MisterMuncher wrote: Fri Apr 23, 2021 10:26 pm As to the great Japan trade deal, I was pricing up bike bits for my mate recently.

Shimano 105 group delivered from Wiggle to NI was £560
Same group delivered from Bike24 (DE) to ROI was €410. *

Turns out Japanese firms are going to continue distribution to UK via their extant EU subsidiaries and let the consumers deal with the costs rather than establish new lines of supply. I don't imagine consumer electronics and similar will be much different.


*Readers familiar with these suppliers will be aware that they are, in fact, the same bloody firm, and pre-Brexit their prices were functionally identical
You’ve probably heard the apocryphal story about the cyclist who went through Checkpoint Charlie every morning and the border guards couldn’t work out what he was smuggling. Bikes.
lambswool liked this
User avatar
By Cyclist
#957
Brexit-cheerleading industry now reaping the Brexit dividend

Norfolk fruit farmer's concerns over harvesting workforce


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-norfolk-56836528

"Before Brexit we were able to employ from Romania and Bulgaria, now we aren't unless they have a right to remain in the UK, therefore that labour source is cut off to us."

Who'da thunk Brexit actually meant Brexit?
User avatar
By Malcolm Armsteen
#974
Samanfur wrote: Tue Apr 27, 2021 1:25 pm But don't forget, they all knew what they were voting for.

They said so enough times, after all.
They really don't like it when you point that out...
User avatar
By Boiler
#983
Malcolm Armsteen wrote: Tue Apr 27, 2021 1:41 pm
Samanfur wrote: Tue Apr 27, 2021 1:25 pm But don't forget, they all knew what they were voting for.

They said so enough times, after all.
They really don't like it when you point that out...
No, it was definitely to free us from "... a sclerotic (it's that word again), bureaucratic, self-aggrandising nonsense that is sucking the life blood out of the European nations that are unfortunate enough to be part of it's wealth re-distributing Socialist programme?"

So there.
By Youngian
#988
Same story across the hospitality industry. FoM provided young seasonal workers and more serious long term applicants. Many of whom will now have settled status but have moved up the food chain. Who would employ the sort of wankers that gob off about immigrants taking jobs even if they did apply?
Hoteliers in the Highlands say Brexit has caused a shortage in hospitality industry staff to reach "crisis levels".
Inverness Hotels Association said applications to vacancies from workers in continental Europe were "drying up".
The group of independent hoteliers said there were not enough hospitality degree course graduates to fill the posts.
And they warned that small businesses may be forced to close.
The association represents 80% of the city's hotel provision. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland- ... s-46385071
long long title how many chars? lets see 123 ok more? yes 60

We have created lots of YouTube videos just so you can achieve [...]

Another post test yes yes yes or no, maybe ni? :-/

The best flat phpBB theme around. Period. Fine craftmanship and [...]

Do you need a super MOD? Well here it is. chew on this

All you need is right here. Content tag, SEO, listing, Pizza and spaghetti [...]

Lasagna on me this time ok? I got plenty of cash

this should be fantastic. but what about links,images, bbcodes etc etc? [...]