Before I stumble any further into this maze of speculation and intrigue, if you want to know something about the most recent Indian saga in Gilroy, California, click on this link to an article published several years ago on Bikernet: Click Here for the Indian Demise Article
Indian’s trail was a sad legacy from 1955, when the Indian doors finally closed. It even took the Vincent company down with it as Phillip Vincent attempted to deliver a much needed and improved drive train to Indian, but the attempt came too late. Phillip returned to England to build his highly successful Vincent V-twins with contract in hand, but couldn’t procure the raw material financing to launch construction, and the company closed. So did Indian, not because of their heritage, legacy, or racing history, but the world was changing fast and Indian didn’t keep up.
The saddest stages happened in the years to follow. Thirty years past and several highly esteemed Indian motorcycle restoration fanatics kept the spirit alive, including Bob Stark, Floyd Clymer, Chuck Myles and Jerry Hatfield, but a succession of entrepreneurs entered the picture in a big way, including an unpopular foreigner, Phillip Zanghi, stepped up first and tried to buy the original plant in Springfield, Massachusetts, then a Mr. Bauchman in New Mexico actually built a prototype motorcycle, and finally another group ended up with the shattered name and little respect.
Men went to jail, bankruptcies were filed and homes lost. Dreams and perhaps egos and greed, mismanegement, even bad luck came to play with the Indian name falling dormant once again in 2004 when the Gilroy concern went under. In one messy mix-master series of failed efforts dealers paid and lost. Folks devoted their lives to the Indian name and never received a motorcycle to sell. Marketing hit the streets but the product never emerged to back the efforts.
When the offer arrived to visit the new Indian plant, two items crossed my mind: First, I was concerned about the economy. Second, I know how tough it is to succeed in this extremely niche market on any level. I asked if the principles had experience in extremely narrow business markets. It’s not as if Indian is just a motorcycle company. Only 40 percentage of all motorcycle sales are V-Twin cruisers, then cut that by five to reach the actual custom V-twin market, or even the limited edition custom V-Twin market. This ain’t buying a toaster company. Everybody uses a toaster, rain or shine, good economy or bad.
We’ll get back to this opportunity as we tour the factory, and hopefully we’ll show you some fantastic examples of historic Indian styling bringing that might rekindle the Indian icon. I asked Melissa about the Steves’ Stellican Private Equity Group (based in London) portfolio and ultimately found them on the Internet. They own the two largest cash register companies (toasters?) in Italy. The acquisition, via a voluntary liquidation procedure, of Sarema S.p.A., the second largest cash register company in Italy, with sales of $24 million.
They do own a couple of niche market companies, including Vickers Plc of Cantieri Riva s.p.a., an Italian producer of luxury motor yachts with the world’s most renowned and prestigious boat brand.
Finally check this, they also own the Vicenza Calcio S.p.A., a leading football team in the Serie A (Italian Premier League) and winner of the 1997 Italian Cup. In every case, they saved these companies from receivership or bankruptcy, had faith and a vision, and pushed them back into the black. These are obviously very well-financed and gutsy individuals who look forward to a challenge.
So I took them up on the offer to visit their new facility, watch their dealer presentation, see the plans for their full line dealer stores, tour their testing/assembly facility and witness a the birth of a new model. My first contact was Melissa Jones as she scooped her kid’s toys out of the way in the back of her minivan for my luggage. Melissa is the young marketing mastermind at this point and she’s scrambling to understand the vast Indian history, the motorcycle market, the industry players, passionate enthusiasts, historians, restorers and dealers who’ve been stung in the past.
“I’ve never been in one (Waffle House),” Melissa told me, but I suggested she start an Indian Journal immediately. Win, lose or draw, a journal from an original Indian employee could be a fantastic read in the future.
We met with Chris Bernauer for dinner outside Charlotte. Chris is the current General Manager and came from 12 years at Harley-Davidson as the Night Train platform manager.
“We have 35 employee currently,” Chris said over sushi, “Mostly engineers from H-D, Excelsior-Henderson and a couple from the previous group in Gilroy. We tried our damndest to listen to former employees and dealers.”
Initially, the Gilroy folks wanted them to fix their existing platform. You can imagine the myriad of ardent suggestions flying at this team everyday.
“Plus we get calls from Steve about spending too much money on the coffee service,” Chris said, “but they don’t hesitate to give us a bundle for a state-of-the-art dyno.”
“There’s nothing around here to eat,” Chris explained as we rolled up the quiet, empty, secret road leading to the icon’s new home. “We just work and lose weight. No time for lunch breaks.”
“We’ve got it right this time,” Chris said with and hint of terror in his eyes.
I wondered what they had right? I wasn’t being critical, but there are so many elements to a monster undertaking like this. Their offices were impressive, the presentation relied substantially on Indian’s historic aspect and so did the dealer presentation. The plant was well laid out and the employees passionate and ardent in their collective desire to see Indian flourish once more.
They’ve rebuilt the Gilroy Power Plus 105-inch engine and made substantial improvements, including light unsleeved cylinders with a state-of-the art coating to the all-aluminum material. Here’s a list of engine improvements.
The cast iron liner cylinders were replaced by all aluminum (Nikasil plated) for better thermal conductivity and lower friction.
The piston is of a new design, much lighter than before, reducing the vibrations significantly.
The crankshaft is improved, eliminating the scissoring encountered in previous Gilroy power trains.
All the gaskets were redesigned for better sealing.
All the covers are better looking after being redesigned, and are chromed and polished, instead of just polished in the past.
There is a new two-into-one exhaust system that meets the EPA noise regulations.
The final drive ratio was optimized for reduced RPM in 6th gear.
The displacement was increased to 105 cubic inches.
The torque and power numbers were significantly improved.
But when I was introduced to the Chief, I was taken aback. It was a Gilroy offspring with a too-large and bulky front end, and tanks that didn’t fit the line of the frame. The rear fender, the absolute centerpiece of the Indian heritage, was too wide, lost the original swoop and covered the line of the frame, which made the fender too wide for the tire. They missed the boat.
“You have such an opportunity,” I said. “Don’t hurry the motorcycle. Make it absolutely right and you’ll have a winner.”
The more I thought about it, the more I believed that licensing deals and apparel lines could spread the word and that the Indian name could initially represent so much more to the world than just a motorcycle. It could represent every thing swoopy, art deco and sexy in the world even before they fight their way onto market with 12,000 bikes in four years, with 2-year warranties and four models (Standard, Deluxe, Roadmaster and Vintage). Hell, they could sell thousands of Indian accessory kits for Harley-Davidsons before they expand their small elegant dealer network to the next level.
“I was an active bidder,” John said. When the bankruptcy dust settled he ended up with the rights to build the Power Plus engine. He purchased the assembly line and moved it to Seattle. “If they had survived into 2004 the engine would have been vastly improved.” John also ended up with a tremendous archive of Indian memorabilia that the Stellican guys chose to pass on.
“I had to let them know that the Power Plus name license had lapsed,” John White told Bikernet during a radio interview. “I called Stellican directly and told them if they were not going to renew the name, I was.” Click Here for the Bikernet Radio Interview.
John bought 300 engines with brand-new cast cases. “Rouse racing corrected all the engine drawbacks,” John said. “Then I had Allen Sputhe tune it. It’s a 100-incher, but we can bump it to 107 or 110. It’s available fuel-injected or carbureted.”
John built some Gilroy Indians and likes the current size. He’s 6-4.
“It’s a big guy’s bike and my goal was to purchase Indian,” John said. “If they don’t move, I’m going into full production.” Building a brand name with Crazy Horse is much more difficult project, but he plans to move forward if Indian doesn’t. His web site is CrazyHorseMotorcycles.com and he’s not messing around. “From a business standpoint,” John continued, ”I don’t have much confidence (in Indian), but in the meantime, we are building engines and are planning to build a motorcycle. I’ll buy Indian if I get a chance.”
There you have it. The sizzling saga continues and Indian fans all over the world have their fingers and toes crossed. According to the factory, in North Carolina, new models will be on display in the Badlands during the Sturgis Rally just a month away. Hang on.