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2007 NHRA NATIONAL EVENT
SCHEDULE

Listen to Trackside Interviews
with Champions, Drivers and Crew Chiefs
Robert Hight
Hillary Will
Bob Vandergriff
Dave Connolly
Ed Iskenderian
Cory McClenathan
Robert Hight
Jim Yates
Tony Bartone
Hillary Will
Whit Bazemore
Byron Hines
2005 Interviews






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Q&A
BYRON HINES /bigger>/bigger>/fontfamily>/center> In
March 1987 Terry Vance rode up to the starting line at Gainesville (Fla.)
Raceway. He was riding a Suzuki and Byron Hines was making the tuning calls. It
was the first time the two-wheel category was a professional category after
years of being a top sportsman draw. Vance and Hines were quick to make their
names stand out. Vance ran an 8.092-second pass at 165.04 thereby setting the
first NHRA Pro Stock Motorcycle national record. It was the start of a decorated
career for both Vance and Hines and they quickly became Vance & Hines
Motorsports. Not only did the two join forces to create havoc on the race track,
but they also started an exhaust pipe company that would soon be known
worldwide. That national record set in 1987 would be the first of 24 that Hines
has tuned with several NHRA Pro Stock Motorcycle competitors so far. Since that
ride in Gainesville, Hines has tuned three riders – Vance, older son Matt Hines
and younger son Andrew Hines – to 14 national E.T. records and 10 national speed
records. By the way, he's tuned some victories as well. With original Screamin'
Eagle Harley-Davidson factory rider GT Tonglet thrown into the mix, Byron Hines
has tuned his riders to 63 national event victories in 90 final round
appearances. Oh yeah, he also has five NHRA POWERade championships to his
credit. Just for fun, you should know that he's also claimed the No. 1
qualifying position 65 times.
The man behind all of those stats, however,
couldn't give you the numbers himself. The team owner and lead tuner for the
two-bike Screamin' Eagle/Vance & Hines V-Rod team is too busy trying to make
the bikes go quicker while seeking a third consecutive title with the younger
Hines. Byron Hines has never been one to brag, boast or make a fuss. Those are
just a few reasons why the Screamin' Eagle folks tabbed him to create a
Harley-Davidson program from scratch. Now Hines and the rest of the Pro Stock
Motorcycle class are preparing for their next event – the FRAM Autolite NHRA
Nationals at Infineon Raceway in Sonoma, Calif., July 28-30. In this Q&A
session Hines talks about why he left his job at the U.S. Post Office to pursue
racing, what his biggest challenge as a team leader continues to be and why he
would have made a great doctor.
Q: What makes you tick as a person?
HINES: I enjoy the competition. I think I have a very competitive spirit
in everything I do.
Q: What makes you tick as a tuner?
HINES: I
want to have the fastest motorcycle on the track. I strive to be the best of the
best at that time. That doesn't always happen so that goal keeps bringing me
back. I also have a great passion for the sport. I enjoy keeping up with the
latest technology and that's all part of what it takes to do this job well.
Having an association with good people keeps you interested in the sport too.
The people keep you involved.
Q: Have you ever considered retirement?
HINES: Sure, I think everyone does when you've been involved this long.
But I want to finish out the Harley-Davidson program first. I want to continue
this program with Harley-Davidson for as long as we are mutually happy and
striving for similar goals. I also want to wait until the business we have is to
the point where it can operate without me being in the shop everyday.
Q:
Why did you choose racing?
HINES: I thought motorcycles were easy to work
on, a lot easier than a car anyway. One person could manipulate a motorcycle and
yet they were more of a high-performance vehicle at the time. They were all
about performance. It was a natural fit for me. I always loved
motorcycles
Q: Who encouraged you to start a racing career?
HINES:
I just really wanted to race. I read the magazines and thought that was
something I could do myself. I kept reading about what people were doing at
Lyons Dragstrip back in the late 60s before I went into the service. When I was
in the service (Army, during Vietnam) I told myself that when I got out, that
was one of the things I was going to do. Three days after I got out of the
military, I went out and bought a new 750 Honda. That was it. That was the real
start of it. We had raced on smaller bikes before, but that Honda really started
the pursuit of a racing career.
Q: Who were your role models growing up?
HINES: My grandpa, John Junk. He was such a hard worker. He was stern,
but he was always an upstanding person in the community.
Q: What made
you decide to give up riding the bike and focus just on tuning the
bike?
HINES: I knew that the equipment was better than the rider at that
point. Lots of guys won't admit that but it was pretty obvious to me. I ran one
calendar NHRA season (earned the victory at Topeka in 1992) and that was enough.
I knew at that point when I had won just one race when the bike was capable of
winning six that it was time to get off the bike. It's pretty grueling. It's a
grind riding and building and tuning. I couldn't make excuses on either side, so
I had to make up for my deficiencies as a rider by tuning the bike better. I
knew I had to hand that job over to someone else at some point.
Q: What
made you choose Terry Vance?
HINES: Terry was obvious because he was
energetic and he could really ride the bike. Terry always did well under
pressure and he had goals in mind. All of that set him apart.
Q: What is
the best thing about your hometown in Nebraska?
HINES: Laurel, Nebraska
was where I was born, but I was raised in Coleridge, Nebraska. We were young
when we left but I always remember farm life being tough but OK. We had a lot of
fun out there. But it's a lot of work. To be a farmer you have to be a
self-starter. Someone could easily sit in the house and do the least amount of
work to get by, but you have to be self motivated in order to maximize crops. My
grandfather lived in town and he was always active, always busy. I never saw him
sitting around much.
Q: What does the Screamin' Eagle team do better
than any other team in NHRA competition?
HINES: The fact that we race
Harley-Davidson and can represent a company that is No. 1 in its category
(motorcycle manufacturer) makes us want to be received in the same manner when
it comes to racing. It took a while for us to do what they wanted – become
competitive, introduce a new product to motorcycle racing and more – but I think
we've done a good job of it so far. I think we represent Harley-Davidson with a
good image.
Q: What does this team need to improve?
HINES: Our
communication is always a constant battle. We have so many people that all have
competitive spirits and it's difficult to communicate between each other at
times. The team chemistry is as good as it can be. We have great people. Any
team in the world can get along when you are winning races and doing well. But
teams have a tendency to self-destruct when you are not doing well and don't
seem to be getting the breaks. That's when overall team management has to be
effective.
You have to show some leadership at those times and that
comes down from myself, Terry and Matt. You can't freak out when things aren't
going your way. You have to create a method and plan to correct the situation
and then move forward. As long as you have a procedure in place, a team can get
through anything. But if the leadership lacks direction and everyone doesn't see
the same direction, the team can get in trouble.
Q: What other jobs have
you had in your lifetime?
HINES: I worked at the post office for a while.
I was a mail carrier in high school. I realized quickly that wasn't something I
wanted to do. I worked at TV Guide at the printing facility for TV guide. I was
worker and I just moved stuff around. It was a union kind of job. It was very
interesting and a great environment. There is a lot that goes into processing
that item and I liked that. I was a tool and dye maker at Dutch Fasteners. That
was a very tedious but somewhat interesting job but I still knew that it wasn't
what I wanted to do for a lifetime. Every job I had I just saved enough for a
motorcycle.
I also worked at RC Engineering in1971. I worked with Russ
Collins and I'm pretty sure I was his first employee. He had a motorcycle shop
and it was the very beginning of the high-performance motorcycle era. I did a
lot of different jobs there from mounting tires, laying spoke wheels, tune-ups,
basically whatever it took to make the customer happy. Russ had a really
creative period in the 70s. At that time, no one had any formal training but
everyone wanted high-performance parts and I had the unique opportunity to be
part of that era.
I learned a lot from that job. I met Terry at the
dragstrip probably six months after I went to work at RC Engineering. I would go
to track on Wednesday nights and I kept running into him. I would race against
him in bracket series and then Terry came to work at RC within a year of when I
was there. He came in as the phone sales guy. He was just 18 or 19 years old and
the next thing you know, he realized he had a knack for business. He was a
shining star and Russ recognized that early.
Q: What would you be doing
for a living if you weren't a professional tuner and team owner?
HINES: I
would have liked to been in the medical field. I think it would have been nice
to be a specialist, something in the bio mechanics field or maybe an orthopedic
surgeon. I have an interest in it but whether or not I would have had the
ability is something I question, of course. I would have had the discipline to
go to school, but I'm not sure I would have been able to stomach it, but it
would have been an aspiration.
Q: What are your career goals and how can
you ensure they will be accomplished? Why are you still out here
competing?
HINES: I'm still out here because I have the desire to make
the business a success. That's very important to me. Whether we are working on
Suzuki's or Harley-Davidsons, I want to have a nice place to work with
enthusiastic employees who really want to work here. I want the boys (Matt and
Andrew) to learn from their experiences and I want them to enjoy what they do
and turn out to be decent individuals.
I get a tremendous amount of help
from influential people like Terry and the people from Harley-Davidson,
enthusiastic people who have been on the team and helped start this project.
Originally we were just a loosely knit bunch of guys building race engines. Then
we stepped up to the plate and took on the concept of producing a finished
product and that was really cool. We have at many times pushed beyond the point
of what we thought was possible and what we thought we were capable of doing.
Once you do that, it gives everyone self-confidence and that is a great thing to
see. In order to reach your goals in a competitive arena, everyone has to not
only understand what the goals are, but they must also believe those goals are
possible and that’s a neat concept and something I work on building everyday.
Q: What do you do well as a tuner?
HINES: I don’t think there is
any one particular thing. I look at the overall scheme of things see how
everyone is doing. You have to know how to get the right people on your team and
then you need to be able to appreciate their opinion. I think a good team leader
knows when to intervene and when to let the other team members work out the
issues. I try to pay attention to trends and know where performance is going and
understand the global picture. I listen to the rider, understand what Matt,
Scott (Scuerman, team mechanic) are saying and I think I know when to bring all
those bits of information together.
Q: What do you do well as a team
owner?
HINES: I try not to act like a team owner and stay involved with
the projects from the ground level. That may not be the right way to approach
it, but it seems like it is for us. The interaction between our team and
Harley-Davidson for example, I believe, is very important. But we let Terry do
all the talking because he's the best one for that job. I think it's important
to be able to delegate specific tasks to the right people.
Q: What is
your weakness as a team owner?
HINES: That will always be the way I
handle some of the things that come with being a father to Matt and Andrew and
dealing with Matt as a crew chief and Andrew as a rider. I know I can step in
and really get on them and get in their face and they won't quit. It does make
it difficult having immediate relatives on the team. It can make the decision
process more difficult.
Q: Did you ever imagine both of your sons would
have championships so early in their careers?
HINES: I knew how tough it
was out there because I raced myself. When Matt started racing, I was astounded
at how well he did. We planned to run him for just three races because I figured
he would get tired of it he wouldn't want to do it any more than that. I had
faith in him but I had no idea he would jump on that deal so quick and do as
well as he did. He performed way better than anyone had anticipated. We went to
three races and I knew right away we had to keep going. He really amazed
me.
Meanwhile, the other kid was watching all of this, wondering if he
could do the same thing. When Matt started, everyone was running in the 7.50s.
When Andrew started racing, everyone was running in the teens already. He had a
steeper learning curve and he had to get up to speed a lot quicker. But the
technology was there to help him. I am still amazed that they both have done as
well as they have. Matt probably amazed me the most because it came out of no
where. I thought Andrew had to be at least as good as his older brother and he
ended up being pretty darn good.
Q: What made you and Terry Vance such a
good team?
HINES: He has a good grasp on the big picture and what is out
there. With everything he does, not just motorcycle stuff but the business
aspect as well, he has a really broad view of life. We trust each other and have
been friends for a long time. We've been friends for more than 35 years.
Q: What will it take to remain competitive for a championship this
season?
HINES: Main thing for the team is not to lose confidence. We
have to continue to test and develop and find some more power. We're
going to keep working on our combination, refine the combination and
step outside the box a little and try to take a chance every now and
then. It might lead to something bigger. The main thing is not to give
up hope. When you get in those trenches it's easy to throw in the towel.
The rider has to believe 100 percent that they can win rounds even if
the bike is not that good. He has to know that some days he has to carry
the bike and some days the bike will carry him. We're lucky because we
have two great riders in GT Tonglet and Andrew and they both are capable
of leading this team to round wins on any given weekend |
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The Reinhart
Report















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