Erik Buell Article - Erik Buell Racing
Transcription
Erik Buell Article - Erik Buell Racing
INTERVIEW P70 VOL. 51 ISSUE 7 FEBRUARY 19, 2014 P71 ERIK BUELL INDIAN SUMMER Erik Buell’s EBR team is about to embark on its World Superbike venture… but that’s only half of it. Erik Buell will see a dream come true when his EBRs compete in the 2014 World Superbike Championship. BY ALAN CATHCART PHOTOGRAPHY BY KEL EDGE W hen the 2014 World Super bike Championship kicks off at Phillip Island on February 23, among the eight different manufacturers represented on the grid will be an all-new, all-American one – EBR. As such, its debut will represent a personal milestone for company founder Erik Buell, who created EBR/Erik Buell Racing from the ashes of the Buell Motorcycle Company after Harley-Davidson shut it down in October 2009 and whose personal goal of going Superbike racing at the highest level will finally be achieved. But the existence of Team Hero EBR – as the team will be formally known – also comprises a key step in the repositioning and restructuring of its primary sponsor, India’s Hero MotoCorp. The world’s largest pure motorcycle manufacturer (so, for example, no cars as well, unlike Suzuki and Honda), Hero’s annual sales of six million powered two-wheelers has until now been exclusively concentrated in India, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka – and Colombia, in South America. Until now it could not sell its products in the 150 other countries around the world where its then-partner Honda was already a significant player, as a condition of the contract with the Japanese giant in 1984 that brought the Munjals, the family behind Indian bicycle giant Hero Cycles, into motorized two-wheelers to create Hero Honda. This joint venture dominated the world’s second largest motorcycle market for a quarter of a century, until Honda filed for divorce in December 2010. INTERVIEW P72 VOL. 51 ISSUE 7 FEBRUARY 19, 2014 P73 mass transportation sector with the Leap as the first fruit of this new focus. Here’s our interview with Buell, prior to him heading off to India for the Expo, where we talked to him about how his highly significant alliance with Hero MotoCorp came about, and he also threw a spotlight on his future strategy for the EBR brand. In October 2009 HarleyDavidson shut down Buell. We visited you here six months after that, soon after you founded EBR, and you had five or six people working with you in a tiny corner of this former Buell plant. Things have changed a bit since then, so how did this bigger engineering group at EBR than we ever had at Buell, around 60 out of the 110 employees right now. And it’s an international group – in addition to the my own direction. The leadership core American majority, we have at Harley could have been a lot people from Spain, Germany, Jamore obstructive about that, but pan and of course India working they told me, “We respect you, for us here. We have one Indian we know you want to go in a very guy who actually works full time different direction than us, so go for me, but we also have people do your own thing, just don’t step from India who come over and do consultant engineering work on our toes!” So now I was free to be very for Hero with us, ranging from high tech, to do a lot of engi- two to ten at a time. It’s more neering things I wasn’t able to do like a knowledge-sharing thing with Buell. What you saw back in – Hero has an investment in us, 2010 was the beginning of that so they send teams of engineers process that’s allowed us to grow over, to work with us and learn so radically ever since then. Even from us. It’s a pretty steady flow. in 2011 there were just 10 of us They have a big apartment here here, and just one year ago in they’ve rented where these guys 2012 only 30 – but now we have can stay. 110 employees here at EBR, and How did your link with Hero that’s before we begin manufac- come about? turing the new 1190RX very soon. It started with me being introWe’ll add another 25 to 30 more duced a few years ago to Pawan people in the production area for Munjal through a mutual friend. He’s a very bright guy, and we that. Against that number, how got on straight away. He has a many did you employ when very long-term vision, and he’s the Buell Motorcycle Compa- also an engineer, so it was a good fit. Coming from different ny was at its peak? There were 185 people full- perspectives and cultures, it was time with Buell, and although on really intriguing to me to get to the manufacturing end not many know each other, and I think to of those have come back to work him, too. It must have been in the for EBR, to those few good guys who have done so, you can add stars that this should occur probably about half of the engi- right on the cusp of Honda terneers that I had before at Buell minating the Hero Honda joint who have come back here to venture. That was actually part of the EBR. But we’ve also added more - we now have a significantly reason for the introduction. This ERIK BUELL The Munjals control 52.25 percent equity in the newly rebranded Hero MotoCorp (after buying Honda’s 26 percent share), and are now free of previous restrictions. Hero has already grown its overseas presence to a dozen countries, although currently just 2.5 percent of its overall six million sales are outside India. However, aided by the global exposure that its participation in World Superbike racing with EBR will deliver, Hero is slated to enter a total of 30 countries in the next four years – including the U.S. By that time 10 percent of its sales are projected be outside India, amounting to one million units, with its annual volume expected to reach 10 million units by then. Hero’s Managing Director/ CEO Pawan Munjal has said that by 2020 his company will sell its products in more than 50 countries worldwide, by which time its annual production capacity should reach 12 million units a year, manufactured in over 20 factories of which more than half will be outside India. So the arrival of Team Hero EBR on the World Superbike stage is an event whose significance goes way beyond racing – as, indeed, does Hero’s decision revealed on July 1 this year to purchase a 49.2 percent stake in EBR for a reported $25 million. This came after the Indian giant had sponsored the two-rider EBR team in the AMA Superbike series for the 2012-13 seasons, and after the two companies had Geoff May (99) and Aaron Yates will ride the EBRs this week in a test at Phillip Island and on February 23 in the series opener. already successfully teamed up to begin redressing Hero’s lack of in-house engineering capability in the wake of its divorce from Honda. Honda had essentially been responsible for the creation of new models, leaving its Indian partners to adapt them to manufacture, make them, and sell them. The acclaimed Hero Leap serial hybrid scooter was entirely conceived and developed by EBR, which has now taken over all of the former 54,000-square foot Buell Motorcycles factory in East Troy, Wisconsin. There, Buell’s new company has developed two very different powered two-wheelers in the come about? I saw some exciting opportunities in the industry that with Buell being gone I could now look at doing. It was a cool company, we did a lot of neat things, but at the same time it was also restrictive in other ways, because when you’re part of a really big corporation like Harley, your creative spark has to be compounded into the larger whole - so you don’t have as much independence as you’d like. Sadly, it cost a lot of people their jobs when Buell was shut down, but Harley had to do that because of the financial disaster that they were in at the time. But the good news was that this allowed me to go in INTERVIEW VOL. 51 ISSUE 7 FEBRUARY 19, 2014 P75 P74 ERIK BUELL Buell has found the right partner in India’s MotoCorp. friend said, “Hey, you know that you just split with Harley? Well, my friend Pawan just split with Honda, so you guys should get together and talk!” So we met at Daytona, when he came to watch the racing there, and we hung out together and liked each other a lot. We share the same dreams. After Honda’s exit, Pawan was looking to build his own design and engineering organization, but he was also looking for out- side companies to team up with, which might bring him something he couldn’t get from inside. So then we met a couple more times, and I met with some of his leadership, and we actually had a very philosophical discussion about where we think motorcycling is going. It was a totally different way to start a relationship - we were first associated with each other as friends, before we began to work together in creat- ing the Leap hybrid scooter. Hero purchased a 49.2-percent equity in EBR for $25 million. I presume that helped repay the chunk out of your retirement fund that you invested in getting EBR started. No, all of that money has gone into developing the business. Luckily, my lovely wife Tish was willing to keep on investing her share of that money in getting me out of the house, and keeping me working here. Did Hero try to purchase EBR outright? No, and that was part of the discussion. After getting to know Pawan, and seeing the fascinating country that is India, and the interesting company that is Hero, I realized they believe a lot in individuals, and in relationships. He wanted to work with us more as a partner than as a subsidiary. He understands that the entrepreneurial nature we have at EBR is more valuable to us both that way, because we have other clients besides Hero that we consult for, although obviously they’re our largest client. They have a very good relationship with their supply base that Pawan’s father initiated in developing Hero. It’s a very different mindset than a corporate manager who likes to grab onto companies and claim that he’s controlling everything. Obviously, as a minority owner of the business with shares in the company, the success of EBR increases the value of Hero’s shares. We have two Hero people on the board, and we’re also the U.S. and Canadian distributor for Hero’s products, beginning next summer. Look, while EBR is a very American company located in the conservative Midwest, we have a global outlook, and so we have a lot to share with Hero technologically - and culturally, as well, I believe. I think Pawan understands Will you be establishing a new Hero/EBR dealer network to sell Hero products in the U.S.? There will be separate networks, but the more dealers who can take both together, the easier it’ll be. Then we’ll also be selling EBR models outside the USA, starting in Europe and Australia. We’ve set up an EBR Europe office in the Netherlands, and its guys are visiting dealers to show them what we have coming. FOR US AT EBR, IT’S ABOUT “TAKING OUR TECHNOLOGY TO THE NEXT LEVEL, ALTHOUGH WE KNOW IT’LL BE HARD. ” what I’m doing, and I certainly understand what he’s doing. Hero is a very interesting company. They’re not caught up in themselves, they’re very humble, and while they know they’re the biggest and the best at what they do, they also remember that they had to earn that. They’re used to change, they’ve fought and scrambled for everything they’ve got without sitting back and resting on their laurels. I’ve never encountered a large organization like Hero saying with such real candor, “We want to totally reinvent ourselves, how do we do it, and can you help us?” And that’s what we’re doing. -ERIK BUELL Looking at EBR’s products, the 1190RS was really a homologation special to allow you to go AMA Superbike racing. How many of those did you end up making in the end? About 100 the first model year, then a small batch of 30 this year. Some are left, but not many. But then you launched the 1190RX volume production model at the Orlando show in October, and this is not only a lot less expensive than the 1190RS, but also more powerful. How did that come about? In street form it’s indeed more powerful, though obviously both can be the same power in racing trim. We just had the time to develop some more sophisticated strategies from an engine management perspective, and also redesign the combustion chamber. The goal with the RS was to build an incredibly light motorcycle. Our goal with the RX was to make it on the light end of the series production sportbike market, while also delivering a better powerband and emissions. Both bikes use the 72-degree V-twin engine that came from the Buell 1125R, which was originally supplied by Rotax in Austria. How has that evolved, and where will the 1190RX engines be built? Let’s clear up some of the confusion. The 1125R engine was co-designed by Buell and Rotax. We were looking for a new watercooled engine at the time, and Harley was too busy doing new engines for themselves, so they told me to go someplace else. So we went to Rotax. We were also not funded or supported by Harley to have our own engine manufacturing facility, and they didn’t want to have to make this motor even once it was co-designed, because they were at full capacity, and still growing fast. So we ended up having Rotax assemble the engines for us, also. But it was a unique design, not sharing any components with any other Rotax motor. After Buell was shut down, they got the engine back, and then sold it to EBR, with Harley’s approval. We are now sourcing all the compo- INTERVIEW P76 VOL. 51 ISSUE 7 FEBRUARY 19, 2014 P77 ERIK BUELL The Buell RX1190 Superbike. nents entirely by ourselves, and assembling them here in East Troy. Rotax makes no contribution whatsoever to their manufacture. They actually only ever made three parts on that entire engine - they machined the crankcases from raw castings that they brought in from a supplier, they machined the crankshaft out of forgings they had bought, and they machined the cylinder heads out of castings that they bought. Everything else came fully machined from an outside supply source, ready for assembly by Rotax, who did nothing else than that. I basically just had to resource those three components that Rotax had made, and either work directly with their suppliers for the parts they brought in, or source my own. So the 1190 is a 100 percent EBR engine, and it’s not just a bored out 1125 - in fact it has around 140 different parts. The cylinder head castings are different to the ones on the old engine, so it’s not just machined differently, but it’s a whole new casting. The cams are different, the rods, crank, pistons, everything... Team Hero EBR is now going to race in the 2014 World Superbike championship racing with this motorcycle. Why? We’re on our way to becom- ing a global company, and so is Hero, which was not allowed under the terms of its previous Hero Honda joint venture to ex port its products outside of the sub-continent. But now they have to build Hero as a global brand, and our World Superbike partici pation will help with that. One of their concerns is, we’re number one in India and we have great products, but how do we get the brand known outside India and even there, how do we get people talking about Hero, rather than just having us bring a new product to the marketplace, and have our dealers sell the wheels off it? Let’s get the marketplace to start thinking about us, learning about us, getting interested in us – and going World Superbike racing with our partner EBR is a good way of doing that. Hero thinks that road racing is going to grow in a big way in India in the next 10 years – Indians are avid supporters of all kinds of sports, whether it be cricket, golf, lacrosse, hockey, they’re very engaged, and Hero is a huge supporter of sports in India - actually Pawan is an immensely talented pro-level golfer. So for them, it’s not just the technology, they’re celebrating being there, and taking part in the sport of Superbike racing at the highest level. For us at EBR, it’s about taking our technology to the next level, although we know it’ll be hard. We’re not going to compete in the EVO class, which is pretty much minor league in this transition year, but we’ve gone straight to the premier class. We know we’ll get beaten, but we’re going to spend 2014 learning – we’ll have no data for the tracks, and our riders will have to learn them, too. But this’ll put us in good shape for 2015. The team will be made up of Geoff May and Aaron Yates, but who is running it for you? We have a blended team based in Italy, with American members. It’s headquartered in Bergamo, it’s owned by a guy named Claudio Quintarelli, and the manager who’ll be running the operation day-to-day is Giulio Bardi. He was with the WSBK organization for many years, serving on the year or so. So whatever the new Superbike Commission as repre- Superbike rules will be, EBR will sentative of the teams and riders, develop a motorcycle to run unand before that he was the race der them. Hero will obviously be engineer for Fred Merkel when heavily branded on the sides of he won the first two World Super- the bikes, which will help its debike championships for Honda velopment in export markets, but 25 years ago. So he’s used to it’ll also help present them to the working with American riders, Indian home customer, who now and quite successfully. He want- has an Indian manufacturer in this ed to get back into racing, and major global series. It’ll be fun for the World Sueprbike promoters them – especially if and when we are pretty excited about an all- beat Honda. Since you’ll have to manuAmerican brand with American riders and Indian backing coming facture at least 1000 examples before the end of 2014, your into the championship. Have you done any testing EBR World Superbike racer yet with the team, and will the will be based on the 1190RX bikes be any different than the for homologation purposes. ones you ran in AMA last sea- When will that start production? son? Full production will start in JanIt will essentially be the same bike to start with, but of course uary. We originally thought that we’ll be developing it on a con- it was going to be in December, tinuous basis throughout the year. but we had a few parts that are We’ll definitely test with the other late coming in from suppliers. We teams at Philip Island on February are setting up to manufacture in 17-18 before the race, but that’s significant volume straight away. less than a week later, so we hope We already have a big dealer netto test in Spain in late January to work, and many of those guys set us in the right direction. have deposits, so they all want You say your expectations bikes at the same time, so if I for 2014 are minimal, and that dribble them out of the door I’ll you’re just there to learn. But have dealers mad at me. I need in 2015 will you have an EVO to be able to ramp up fast. We’ll Superbike for the new rules? build several thousand bikes for Well, we don’t yet fully know 2014, not hundreds. Back in the what those rules will be, exactly. days of Buell, we built 15,000 But we only want to be running units a year here in a single shift, in the main WSBK class, what- in the same factory we have now, ever it is, not in any subsidiary but we could actually do more category. Let me underline that than that now. With the new facilithis is a long-term project, and ties that we have now, we can do that we’re not just coming in for a 20,000-plus annually - but that’s INTERVIEW P78 ERIK BUELL a few years off! That presupposes a range of Buell models, of which 1190RX is just the first. What other models have you got coming? Fundamentally, we’re working on several other derivatives of that platform that I can’t really talk about, but one of them is not far away, and that’s the 1190SX which will be the Streetfighter version. Then we’ll have the AX next, which is the adventure tourer coming a year or so from now, but there will be others. We have a whole range of bikes that we’re working on, but to actually get a motorcycle into production takes a while. It’s only been four years since Buell was shut down and I founded EBR, and there’s lots of things you have to do to put a bike into production. You have to design it, test it, finance it, productionize it, validate it - it all just takes time. But we’re getting there. Is EBR able to develop the entire package of a new Hero product - including the engine, or does the motor have to be developed elsewhere for you? We can develop the entire bike, with one or more cylinders – and we’re doing just that. Buell was formerly the sportbike spinoff of HarleyDavidson, which meant that you had to make a sportbike that Harley felt comfortable with. Harley’s just launched a new 500cc V-Twin cruiser that’ll be built in India. So now are we going to see a switchhit? Is Erik Buell’s EBR, going to develop a cruiser model for the Indian and other markets which would compete with Harley’s new mini-cruiser? I promised Harley I won’t tread on their toes, and I won’t - there won’t ever be any EBR branded WILL “BETHERE SEPARATE NETWORKS, BUT THE MORE DEALERS WHO CAN TAKE BOTH TOGETHER, THE EASIER IT’LL BE. ” -ERIK BUELL cruisers. It’s not my kind of bike, and Harley does that very well, anyway. What we felt was that there was this gigantic gap in sportbikes, and that’s what we’re addressing. I love to see Harley succeeding again, and even Indian coming in with a new product - that’s all great. But there’s just a whole different side of America to that, the youthful, young, innovative mindset that you see with companies like Apple and suchlike in the consumer electronics sector, and we wanted to apply that kind of ethos to motorcycles. It’s just a different segment, and a different customer than Harley, or Indian - and we intend to succeed in carving that very separate identity for our products, compared to anything made in Europe or Japan, let alone the USA. What are your ultimate plans for EBR? What direction do you see it heading in? It might be interesting to go public. There are some advantages to doing that, and some disadvantages, too. It obviously gives you a pool of money to grow the business with if you float the company on the stock market. I think that if we show a trend of success, people will like the company and want to invest in it, and we can show that we’ve made good use of the money that’s already been invested in us so far, which makes us pretty attractive. So I’d like to go public. Some folks say that they don’t like having other people messing with their business, but I don’t think that that’s true. Harley had their issues with that, and they went quite a way down but then came back up again. We love motorcycles, but at the end of the day, it’s a business – and to be successful in the motorcycle business, you have to be a businessman. To be a good businessman, you have to make money. And there’s nothing wrong with making money, especially when you make it the old fashioned way - which is working your butt off, and earning it. And that’s what we’re doing at CN EBR…