My apologies in advance if I'm regurgitating old news, but I've heard some strange rumors and wanted to verify it if it's true. I wouldn't want to jeopardize the person who originated this mail so I'm omitting the name, but according to this person American Racing as we know it is no longer, having been at least bought out by Wheel Pros as of April 30, 2008. Here's what I got: "I just wanted to let everyone know that as of April 30th, 2008, American Racing has effectively p***ed on as a company. AR and a few of its brands will be run by Wheel Pros and the management will be based in Denver. Co. Most of the remaining employees at the Rancho location have received notice of termination. 19067 and 19200 S. Reyes locations will be fully closed sometime this summer. It remains to be seen what happens with the manufacturing activities located in Kansas City. I've attached the communication we have received and the above should fill in the blanks. Let's all remember American Racing for what it was..." I've also attached the .pdf of the company memo regarding the merger/conquest. Again, my apologies if you've already seen this. I'm not going to apologize for the lack of introduction, though; I did that about seven years ago. I just type slow so I don't post too often.
bumer if they quit making ar wheels. I wonder if it will be like harleys in the 70's(?) still had the name, but wasn't much of a bike... let me guess all new ar wheels will come from china.....
Yeah, I just bought a new set of torqu thrusts and they said made in China on them. Thought it was kind of ironic, AMERICAN racing wheels made in China!
I just saw an add for some new reissue 5 spoke torq-thrust style wheel that looked really good, wonder if it even got to production.
I heard about this buy-out by Wheel Pros at an American Racing open house a few weeks ago. The rep I was speaking with said that the brands will remain the same. Apparently this will make Wheel Pros the largest wheel distributor in the world according to the rep. I guess they run LOTS of the wheel brands out there.
Just Googled this - sounds as if Wheelpros are being merged with the existing ARE which is apparently owned by Platinum Equity. Hold your PANIC ****ons: Platinum Equity has acquired Lakewood, Colo.-based chrome wheel distributor Wheel Pros Inc. from Florida Capital Partners, according to LBO Wire. No financial terms were disclosed. Platinum will merge Wheel Pros with existing portfolio company American Racing Equipment Inc. www.wheelpros.com
i got my wheels at Rancho site some 7 years ago. what a cool place. some 7 buildings and tons of warehouse room. i remember seeing wheel boxes stacked as high and as far as i could see to the other end. what a bummer. we dont make anything anymore, we just consume. kinda scary.
I hate to say it, but I just bought a pair of Torq Thrust D's for my Mustang, and was shocked to see the label on the side of the box said "Made In China". The wheels also had a sticker inside the bead that said the same thing. So I believe it's probably true. Damn IT!
Yup - good ol' Chinese Racing Equipment eh? That's why I will only run original ARE wheels from the 1960s.
Halibrand had to go to China for casting because the American made stuff had about a 60% flaw rate. They tried several U.S. founderies and none could produce the quality they wanted. Plus the China wheels cost them only about $75 each - polished, backspaced, and boxed! The question is will we pay the $400-600 per wheel like Real Rodder's or Dayton's American made wheels cost or just ***** about loss of American jobs? Shop at the locally owned store or Walmart? It's tough, but we're killing ourselves a few bucks at a time.
About ten years ago I was consulting with a well know speed parts business that was thinking about moving some of their manufacturing operations to Mexico in order to save money and because they just couldn't find or keep good welders and machinists. I strongly advised against it because I thought the idea of foreign made parts would kill sales. Well, they stayed put and went out of business two years later because racers wouldn't buy the American made stuff at the price needed to be profitable. Of course all you guys like to get your parts out of a ba*****t or stash of s**** iron, but when you do need something new, buy American!
No wonder,Bought a set of TTO's for my Vette, Made in China,needed about a pound of weights to balance each wheel.
There's wisdom in them thar statements. If we (collectively) stopped buying garbage at Walmart, we could save the money we would have otherwise squandered and use it to buy things based on their value instead of their price point. For example, America is very capable of doing top-shelf boutique work, but quality costs money no matter how you slice it. For example, in the domestic market H-brand certainly could get quality far beyond their expectations; however, it may not have been able to get it for the price it was willing to pay. The company approximated much of the physical quality by having the wheels made in China, but it lost the essential value of supporting our domestic market. Quality products certainly cost more, but they generally have far greater value. To use RR wheels for an example, the quality is greater than the physical properties of the wheels themselves. In that case, part of the quality is preserving domestic manufacturing. It's an investment in our economy, culture, and future. Since our grandparents didn't have the option of shopping at Walmart, they had to pay the higher prices of domestically made products. If you had tightwad grandparents as I did, that might justify the way they thought about things. I'm sure lots of you had "tinkerer" grandfathers. They didn't necessarily do it because they enjoyed being pain-in-the-*** tightwads. They probably did it because they paid a lot of money for the things they owned. It's likely because they remembered forking over every dollar bill for that toaster they were working on. They needed to get the most life from it. Remember, there wasn't a Walmart to sell them a disposable toaster for 1/4 the price--a toaster they'd buy six times over their lifetimes instead of once. Whenever it's viable, I buy American. Sadly, it seems the only American enterprises that are thriving any more are garage sales and swap meets.
I have had my AR 5 spokes since the 60's.I am retired on a fixed income and you'll NEVER see me at Walmart. It's bad enough trying to buy American any where else, but for sure not there!