No, we don't. I've often thought over the years that to have a competitor would be an advantage, because then you could do it better than them.
Sometimes I go into meetings in foreign countries and they look at me rather like the first helicopter salesman. “Boy, have I got a plane for you. It's got no wings and the propeller is on the roof.” I do suffer from that, but at the same time it's such a specific market.
I spoke to Laurent Beaudoin at Bombardier in about the mid-1990s, and we were talking about working with them. His point was that when we get a market that's big enough, like the Ski-Doo or something—the Sea-Doo—then they'd be interested.
Basically we go from one problem area to the next, whether it's the ice and the mobility problems in the north or it's in China looking at quicksand. We don't have big volumes. The dollars are quite high because we sell expensive product, but it's not in that big numbers that companies like Bombardier are interested in.