Partners in Progress 2020 | Page 5

NICK’S 4X4 WAS RIGHT ALL ALONG O ver the course of 20 years, Nick’s 4X4 Performance Center has gone from an outlier among the auto shops in Richmond County, working against the grain doing work that no one thought could be successful in this area, to now being at the forefront of a modern vehicle culture that has taken over the road. Back in the ‘90s there were maybe five lifted trucks in town, said owner Nick Murphy. Because of that fact, people assumed a shop dedicated to that type of clientele couldn’t be successful. But while everyone else joked about Richmond County’s place in that industry, Murphy got serious “I was devoting every ounce of energy I had to learning this and perfecting it, getting better,” Murphy said. “They said we’d never make it, that’s the exact words I heard daily, ‘Richmond County will never support a 4-wheel drive shop.’ That was the fuel, that was all I needed to keep going. Keep telling me we can’t do it and I’ll do it. I won’t even sleep.” Murphy’s love of vehicles grew out of mudslinging with friends in his mom’s yard in the early ‘90s — an expensive hobby if you don’t know how to fix things yourself. His friends started bringing him their Jeeps and trucks for repairs and soon enough he had a reputation to start a business with. “People think sometimes that this field is something you learn in a school,” he said. “There are some two-year degrees where you learn the theory and you touch on things but the only way you’re going to learn this is in the field.” On top of this experience, Murphy worked for a local general auto repair shop after high school for two years. It was here that he said he saw the vision for how he wanted to run his business. He saw the tendency to just put a part on a vehicle because it needed one instead of figuring out why the part failed and preventing that happening again. “I don’t believe in just putting a factory replacement part on a vehicle, I want to upgrade it because if it failed there was probably a reason. It could be something that’s common with that model,” Murphy said. “So upgrading, using after-market parts and good quality stuff, doing a job right the first time is what we’re about.” Nick’s does regular maintenance and services like oil changes, basic repairs, and after-market customizing — pretty much everything but paint and body work. Their specialty is suspension modifications, steering and drive train work. “When I retire and I’m not turning wrenches for the public at all any more, I will still have me a little table somewhere in a shop and I’ll still be setting up gears and axles, I love doing that,” Murphy said. The staff of Murphy’s was once six people, but now it’s down to three: Murphy, Nick Jr. and Tabitha Reeves. Reeves handles the front, allowing Murphy to focus on the vehicles, and Nick Jr. handles the future of the shop -- his dad said he could add a “Jr.” to their logo once he retires. “We appreciate the support all these years, it’s been great,” Murphy said. “We really do have the best customers coming in here.” February-March 2020 • 5