"I've lost a couple of major deals not because I couldn't export, but because the Government took too long to approve the export," he says. "In one case, I got approval to ship the day after I lost the order. The sale went to a Japanese company."
He reckons, by comparison, that New Zealand has a "business-friendly climate", is as close to Asian markets as his US facilities for shipping large-scale machinery and is blessed with world-class engineers who struggle to find work in the country.
After three scouting trips to New Zealand he's decided he'd like to do his bit to change that.
Crockett's plan was to shift his whole Trion Technology operation to New Zealand. But he decided that would be "too disruptive" and he will instead establish facilities to build a new line of small-scale industrial furnaces which are vital in the expensive, and valuable process of creating perfect semiconductors.
Trion's niche is in smaller, often laboratory-scale devices, which sell for a fraction of the US$6 million apiece for industrial-sized applications, suitable for research facilities and second-tier manufacturers. So Crockett has registered Trion Thermal Technologies in New Zealand. There's just one problem - where to locate?
Wellington's "Technology Valley" grouping in Lower Hutt is pushing hard for him to locate in the capital with links to the MacDiarmid Institute at Victoria University.
But he's also being courted by Auckland interests who insist that's where the economies of scale are for manufacturing, as well as strong academic and research support.
"It's a problem," says Crockett. "Everyone's after me. It's like being lured by two beautiful women at once."
The venture will require only minor capital expenditure, and he may seek around $7 million from local investors, but says Trion could absorb start-up costs within a couple of years. At first, he'd be looking for a small team of skilled engineers, with manufacturing occurring in existing machining facilities.