American Motorcycle Dealer AMD 251 June 2020 | Page 27
Zodiac International
50th Anniversary!
1969 was a special year - Jimi Hendrix rewrote the rule book at Woodstock, the
movie Easyrider came out, Harley 'merged' with American Machine & Foundry
(AMF), Mike Corbin started making custom saddles and Zodiac started buying,
making and delivering custom motorcycle parts...
WORDS BY
Robin Bradley / Publisher
[email protected]
PICTURES BY
Onno Wieringa / Madness Photography
www.madnessphotography.eu
The story of the Dutch Zodiac
International distribution business we
know today is largely the story of a
certain drag bike racing Dutchman
called Ton Pels and his son Vincent -
who took over as GM when his father
retired. However, the origin of the story
goes way back even deeper into the
earliest days of the custom parts
aftermarket than that - to 1969 in fact,
the year often regarded as 'Genesis'
for the custom parts industry.
The man who, in effect, started Zodiac
off in 1969 was Joe Phillipson - more
recently of Adjure lights fame. We
asked him what he remembered from
this time: "The business that would
become Zodiac was created after I quit
my job at Hallcraft Industries, a wellknown
spoke wheel company at the
time. The owner, Marv Hall, had sold
the company to Hurst/Airheart, of
Chopper brakes fame, having
previously been acquired by Sunbeam
Products, a very old American
consumer goods business with roots
going back to the late nineteenth
century.
"While at Hallcraft, I had wanted to
get hold of a spokes line
that was
less expensive than anything else on
the market at the time, but of the same
or even better quality. I contacted a
company in Taiwan and sure enough
they gave me a really, really good
quote, and sent me samples. Those
samples were excellent, so I made a
sales tour, racked up a load of orders,
then I found out that the spokes were
not in fact Taiwanese after all. The
owner of the company I'd contacted
got his cousin in L.A. to buy some, ship
them out to him, and he then sent
them in to me, passing them off as
something that he made! That taught
me a very important lesson.
"Once Hallcraft had been
sold, things
went downhill. The new owners didn't
have a clue about the motorcycle
business. They told us to drop the
Taiwan idea, and quite soon I quit,
along with Marv and Jim Smith, who
had been the GM at Hallcraft. When I
left, I took the spoke samples and the
contact details for the factory in
Taiwan with me.
"I contacted a guy called Tom Fairburn
whom we used to buy rims from. He
had them made in Taiwan and they
were pretty good, so I figured he must
know his way around that
jungle.
Joe Phillipson was there at the
start of Zodiac in 1969.
Ton Pels (left) with son Vincent -
check out the trophy line-up -
drag racing is the family passion.
www.AMDchampionship.com
AMERICAN MOTORCYCLE DEALER - JUNE 2020 27