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  <title>Wheel Collision Center - Excellence in Wheel Repair &amp;
Wheel Sales - High-tech wheel repair - The Morning Call Excerpt</title>

  
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<center><font size="2"><b>7286 Penn Drive &nbsp; Bath, PA 18014<br>
Phone: (610) 837-8792 &nbsp; &nbsp; Toll Free: (800) 292-RIMS &nbsp;
&nbsp; Fax: (610) 837-8967<br>
E-mail:<a href="wccemail.html">WheelCollisionCenter</a></b></font></center>

<font size="2"><br>
</font>
<center><font size="2"><font size="4">"The Morning Call"<br>
</font><font size="3">
<center>Reporter's Notebook: Business Start-ups</center>
</font><font size="-1">January, 1994</font></font></center>

<p><font size="2"><font size="4">Two Defy Doubting Auto Experts with
High-Tech Wheel Repair</font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3">When Daryl L. Robbins earned his MBA
from Harvard in 1985, he had the tools tobecome a big wheel. Nine years
later, Robbins is running a littlecompany in East Allen Township,
Pennsylvania, that fixes wheels.<br>
<br>
<i>"Every once in a while I run into a former classmate and they ask
mewhat I'm doing,"</i> Robbins said. <i>"I tell them I repair
wheels,and they act as if I need to have my head fixed."</i></font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"><i>"They ask, 'Wheels?"</i></font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"> To Robbins, a 36-year-oldmechanical
engineer turned entrepreneur, there's no question about it.There's a
bright future in broken wheels.</font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"><i>"I was driving my BMW in Texas a
few years ago, hit a curve, damagedtwo wheels and the suspension,"</i>
Robbins said. <i>"Although theinsurance company was paying and the
wheels were only steel, I decided to findsome nice aluminum ones.
Through the newspaper, I found a business that could order mewheels.
But they couldn't install them, so I had to go somewhere else for that.
Right then, I decidedthat was not the right way to purchase a wheel. It
seemed like a market niche no one was pursuing."</i></font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"> SoRobbins, a former project engineer
for Shell Oil Co. in Houston and businessdevelopment manager at the
INPACO Corp. packaging machine company in Nazareth,began investigating
the wheel market. In 1988, he opened EuroCalWheels and Auto
Accessories, a specialty retail automobile<b>re-styler</b> near his
home in West Chester, Pennsylvania. While this business has been
successful, it wasn't quite hitting the wheelniche. Steel wheels are
virtually disposable, but Robbins found thatmodern aluminum ones are
worth rebuilding. He learned that, with a bitof expertise, a steel
wheel costing $125 can often be fixed for $50.But the real gold mine is
the modern aluminum wheel, which often costs $350 newand can be
repaired for between $75 and $150 in two to five days.Better yet,
virtually no one was doing it.</font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"><i>"There are maybe a half dozen other
businesses in this country thatrepair wheels -- in Georgia, Maryland,
Louisiana, Indiana and California,</i>Robbins said. <i>"There are
thousands of experts on almost every otherpart of a car, but no one
knows anything about wheels.Everyone thinks damaged wheels should be
thrown away."</i></font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3">So he looked up George J. Herschman,
who in 1990 was developing sophisticatedmachines to fix wheels in his
barn in Moore Township. Herschman hadbeen a director of manufacturing
and machine development at INPACO while Robbinswas there. So, they
became partners.</font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"> A year later, theyopened the Wheel
Collision Center in the Airport Commercial Park and began plansfor 15
franchises or company-owned stores around the nation.<br>
<br>
Robbins,whose education also includes an undergraduate degree in
mechanical engineeringfrom Cornell University, has the marketing
background to jump-start the company.Herschman, 50, who has been
designing and building machinery for 25 years, hasthe technical
know-how to do what many automotive experts had thought wasimpossible
-- fix damaged auto and truck wheels at a reasonable price.</font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3">It's an idea that's caught on with
insurance companies who are looking to savebucks on replacement parts.
And likewise for motorists who notice their vehiclerides a little
different after hitting a pot hole.</font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"><i>"I was talking about putting my
second EuroCal Wheels store inAllentown, and even had a location picked
out,"</i> Robbins said.<i>"George had left INPACO, too, and he
contacted me about helping withpackaging at my company. After we got
talking, I decided to put this second store on hold and got together
with George on somethingelse."</i></font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"> Thus, began the Wheel Collision
Center, asubsidiary of Advanced Machine Systems Inc. in East
AllenTownship. Robbins, president, and Herschman, vice president,each
own 50 percent of the operations.</font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"> With an initial investment of$35,000,
they leased a 2,000-square-foot facility in the Airport Commercial
Parkin East Allen and purchased equipment in May 1991. They also
obtaineda $35,000 grant in 1992 from the Ben Franklin Technology Center
at LehighUniversity, and $77,000 in 1993 for metallurgical studies on
the wheels.</font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3">Herschman, who has designed several
machines to facilitate wheel repairs, hasapplied for patents on several
of his prototypes. Herschman'sequipment is designed to straighten bent
wheels and renew broken and scratchedones. The refurbishing entails
machining, welding, polishing andrefinishing.</font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"><i>"This is a wonderful state for
potholes,"</i> Herschman said. <i>"There are tons of damaged wheels
out there."</i></font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3">Robbins estimated that there are 250
million aluminum wheels on American roads,making the size of the market
up to $200 million per year. Whileannual sales at Wheel Collision
Center are just under $1 million, Herschman saidthere's plenty of room
for growth for the company that employs 10.</font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"><i>"This is not something you'd want
to do in your backyard, like peopleused to do with their steel wheels,"</i>
Herschman said. <i>"Specialequipment is needed, and we have developed
the prototype, applied for patentsand are on the second level of
equipment."</i></font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"> Currently, theWheel Collision Center
is fixing more than 400 wheels per month. But that willexpand when the
company finds more locations.</font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"><i>"We feel that from our information,
we are the most advanced of thewheel repair companies in terms of the
quality of our work,"</i> Robbinssaid. <i>"Because of our professional
approach, we will be the marketleader."</i></font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"> The Wheel Collision Center's primary
market extendsfrom southern New England to Maryland -- areas where
wheels can be shipped oneway in a day. That way they can be repaired
and returned to the ownerin four days or less.</font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"><i>"It's very important, obviously, to
have these repaired wheels returnedquickly,"</i> Robbins said<i>.
"That's why we're looking for otherlocations in the country -- places
where they can be repaired and shippedquickly."</i> Robbins plans to
develop the markets with bothcompany-owned and franchise operations.
They recently invested in atoll-free number (1-800-292-RIMS) to help
begin their expansion.</font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"><i>"We will find the best people we
can and bring them to the point wherethey can operate independently of
us,"</i> Robbins said. <i>"Thatbusiness could run itself without me.
That's a tribute to all the peopleworking there."</i> He wasn't
kidding. On the day he andHerschman were to be interviewed and
photographed for this story, easternPennsylvania was hit with an ice
storm. Not only was Robbins unable totravel from West Chester to the
Wheel Collision Center in East Allen, but hiscar was back-ended by
another motorist.<i> "They'll be okay without me,"</i> he said,
speaking from aroad-side hotel near his deserted car.<i>"I don't know
about my car. One thing. The wheels are OK. And I know a place I could
have gotten themfixed cheap, too."</i></font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3">- by <i>Dan Shope</i>, of The Morning
Call</font></font></p>

<p><font size="2"><font size="3"><a href="wccinfo.html">Return to
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<h6>
<center><font size="2"><font size="3">This page, and all contents, are
Copyright (C) 1996 - 1999 by Wheel CollisionCenter, Bath, PA, USA.</font></font></center>
</h6>

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