20 bucks says 95% of the people buying a Berg 5 get a stock mainshaft. Lengthen a 3.88 pinion and a 4.12 pinion and you'd have 95% of them covered. It's only weirdos like us who want a 3.44, and we can wait.
I don't think GBE does more than one 5 speed production run a year (I'll ask Bruce and see what he knows). I also don't think the r&p's are the issue- it's the mainshafts. Of the 10 or so Berg 5's I know of around here, 3 or 4 are either stock mainshafts with 2.25 2nd's (grafted on from a type 1 autostick trans) or custom 1st-2nd gears. The 2.25's are hard to find and the aftermarket shafts are too expensive to stock. I totally get (and agree) that they way they do it isn't the best business model, but I really don't think they have the cash to invest in stock that will sit around for 2? 3? years or longer. They're not the shop they once were, stock a fraction of what they once did, the shop is down to a 4 day work week and if their doors closed tomorrow I wouldn't be surprised. I'd be disappointed, because they were there in the beginning and are a large part of the history of this hobby, but not surprised. I think you'll see Rancho take over production should the Berg family call it quits.
Anyone who's been around this hobby long enough knows that Gene Berg either outright invented or had a hand in originating a lot of the performance products (that are now made in China at not always nearly the same quality) we take for granted today. He cast up the first intake manifolds to put Solex 40 P11's on type 1 engines, made the first type 1 close ratio gears by hand for drag racing when guys were breaking Porsche transaxles on a regular basis (and the P stuff was even expensive back then!). The first (couple?) sets were, by Gene's admission, horrible, because although modelled after the Porsche gears, being made by hand were quite rough, but they got him down the track and showed the rest of the crowd what they could do.
Gene wrote an article- "The Killing of an Industry" in 1979 or '80, as people were already making money on inferior offshore built copies of his stuff. Even back then, many VW people were cheap-assed and would buy junk more than once expecting a better result. So many people just don't get that quality costs (hence the whole Pertronix toasting fiasco). He predicted what we have today.
PS- When GBE did the first run of 5 speeds it took them over 5 years to sell 112 kits (a kit being everything you didn't have to send in for lengthening/modifying- you still had to provide a pinion and a mainshaft, sliders, shift forks and ...)
Stan also said- "Berg is going to lose what business they might have had by continuing an insane wait time for parts lots and lots of people would like to have, but have no desire to wait up to 2 years for. No replica builder anywhere is going to offer it as an option, because an indeterminate wait for parts that may or may not come is not going to sell cars. This is really too bad, because a 5-speed is one of the nicest additions a guy can make to a car.
It's an insane business model."
Again, Stan, I agree with you, but given present circumstances, I don't know how they'd change it.