Good Fabrications, one of the world's leading fabricators of
exhausts for motorsport as well as a top manufacturer of tube and
custom bends, first came into existence in May 1982. It was then
that Steve Good, a fabricator with the Grand Prix winning McLaren
team left to start his own business. His company's first premises
was a workshop in Dick Bennett's Ashford-based West Surrey
Engineering, then a leading Formula Three entrant. Within less than
a year Steve had moved to lease space at Spirit Racing in Slough.
Another former McLaren fabricator Jeff Hill started with him on a
self employed basis. At this time the business was just a two-man
operation working on such as suspension; tubes were yet to
come.
Customers at this stage included Toleman, which went on to
become the Benetton Formula One operation and eventually Renault.
The most notable achievement for the little team during Good
Fabrications' first year with it was a fighting second place for
the then up-and-coming Ayrton Senna in a rain soaked Monaco Grand
Prix. The mercurial Brazilian additionally finished on the podium
in Germany and Portugal that year. Steve also carried out work for
his former employer, McLaren fabricating uprights and
wishbones.
Steve's landlord, Sprit had, like Toleman, moved into Formula
One with Good Fabrications assisting in the building of its
Hart-engined cars in 1984 and 1985. With no tube bender at this
stage Good Fabrications bought in bends for the exhausts.
After about 18 months in Slough, Steve purchased an old coach
house in Windsor with a forge enabling him to move his workshop
into his back garden. It was about this time that he purchased his
first tube bender and stared serious work on exhaust systems.
Amongst the first customers for these was March for its Formula
3000 cars, the Bicester racecar manufacturer winning the F3000
championship in each of the first three years during which it was
run. Steve was to continue supplying to the formula working for its
engine manufacturers Cosworth and Zytek.
Good Fabrications also moved into World Championship sportscar
racing supplying exhausts systems for the charismatic Group C
TWR-run Jaguars, which won the Le Mans 24-hours in 1988 and 1990.
The company was now beginning to concentrate heavily on exhausts, a
business that was proving to be more lucrative than other
fabrication work. Work continued for McLaren, fabricating the
systems for the turbocharged TAG Porsche engines that the team used
from 1983 to 1987, winning the F1 World Championship with Niki
Lauda and Alain Prost in 1984, 1985 and 1986.
At this time, few others were supplying motor sport exhausts
systems at such a high level. There was also work for leading rally
teams - Prodrive was to become a regular customer. Good
Fabrications developed the exhausts systems for the Banbury
operation's highly successful works Subaru team which won three
drivers' - for Colin McRae, Richard Burns and Petter Solberg - and
three manufacturers' World Rally Championships. (Good Fabrications
also supplied the systems for the Prodrive developed Ferrari F550
Maranellos that won the GT class at Le Mans in 2003.)
After a couple of years at the forge, Steve moved his workshop
to Datchet and then, in August 1988, to Langley, and expanded the
business into the lucrative IndyCar world. Work for the F3000
Marches led to more for said manufacturer's Indy cars, which,
during the mid-1980s dominated the field at the Indianapolis 500,
winning the race on five consecutive occasions. It was an era when
British cars were the only ones to have for Champ Car racing as it
then was and Good Fabrications went on to work for Lola, which took
over as the dominant IndyCar supplier from March in the late 1980s,
winning the 500 in 1990. It also supplied Reynard, which came first
at the Brickyard in 1995, driven by future F1 world champion
Jacques Villeneuve, and 1996. Good Fabrications had really taken
hold of the IndyCar market, which now became its main business. It
is thought that, in the mid-1990s, when everyone of the 33 cars on
the Indianapolis 500 grid was either a Lola or a Reynard, that the
company supplied exhausts for the entire field. Wastegates were
also made for the turbocharged Cosworth XB engine that competed at
the Speedway winning in 1995 and 1996. The XB was also the engine
that powered Nigel Mansell's Lola during the two years that he
competed in Champ Car, winning the championship in 1993 as well as
Rookie of the Year award at Indianapolis.
Good Fabrications had not, though, forgotten its Formula One
roots. The company supplied Brabham right up to its final,
Judd-powered season in 1992. McLaren continued to be a customer and
when its iconic designer John Barnard, who had been responsible for
the 1984 to 1986 title winning cars, moved on, becoming responsible
for the Ferrari F1 cars from a base in Guildford, the company also
took on work for the world-famous Italian manufacturer. The
Beatrice-backed Carl Haas Lola raced in Grands Prix by former World
Champion in 1985 and 1986 also used Good Fabrications exhausts.
Other F1 customers in the 1990s included famous names such as Lotus
and Tyrrell plus Pacific, which took part in Grand Prix racing in
1994 and 1995 and Forti that competed in 1995 and 1996.
Reynard was also a customer during its time as a production
Formula 3 manufacturer, Good Fabrications again supplying stainless
steel systems, mainly built by Jim Claridge, for virtually every F3
car on the grid. It was a formula in which there was also
profitable aftermarket business. British Touring Car Championship
contenders, such as MGs, Volvos and Andy Rouse's 'works' Ford
Mondeos, were also to find their way onto Good's customer base. In
the mid-1990s the Opel teams in the then Deutsche Tourenwagen
Meisterschaft (DTM), such as Joest, Zakspeed and Rosberg, also
began to use Good Fabrications stainless steel exhaust systems.
This proved to be an excellent market.
While exhausts had effectively taken over the business the
company carried out suspension work for the Peugeot 905 Le Mans
winners of 1992 and 1993. (Good Fabrications was to supply to the
French manufacturer again in 2007, the year that it returned to
endurance racing.) However, the company had come to realise that
exhausts were a far more profitable sector. Weight saving Inconel
had come into use on F1 turbo systems in the mid-1980s and, by the
end of the 1990s this had found its way onto the IndyCars.
In 1992 Simon Cavey also joined the business, initially to help
out Steve with tube bending for a few days…and ended up staying for
five years. In November 1999, Steve was tragically killed in a
helicopter accident and the company was inherited by his wife,
Angie. Phil Levett, who had been with Good Fabrications since April
1989, and Warren Briggs took over the day-to-day running of the
company, while Simon returned, as with Steve's death there was
again a need for his tube bending expertise. At about this time the
company commencing doing all of its jig work in house. Jeff and
Simon were both to leave the company purely because of the length
of their commutes, the latter to establish his own machine shop
that still today carries out work for his former employer.
In September 1993 Good Fabrications established a well equipped
base in Indianapolis close to the workshops of racecar constructor
Riley and Scott and with assistance from the latter's Mark Scott
who had worked with Steve at McLaren. Good was supplying systems
direct to both Lola and Reynard but the opening of a US base gave
the leverage to both protect and grow what became a massive
aftermarket business. Steve regularly attended the Indianapolis
500.
When the spilt occurred in IndyCar racing in 1996 and Champ Car
and the Indy Racing League went its separate ways, the US operation
was closed down. However, Good Fabrications continued to supply for
the Lolas and Reynards of the former, and such teams as Penske
Racing and Target Chip Ganassi, while also manufacturing bends for
Ilmor's IRL Chevrolet engine. It continued to supply for the
championship winning Toyota and Honda powerplants of Champ Car
until the series became a single engine formula in 2003. In NASCAR,
Good Fabrications also became a supplier to the three time Cup
championship winning Joe Gibbs team.
Good Fabs, as it is now known, has continued to supply Inconel
exhausts systems from its current base in Long Crendon to the
highest level including F1 and NASCAR, as well as to lesser series
such Formula Palmer Audi and Caterham racing and to non-automotive
sectors such as the defence and marine industries. When, in 2002,
Toyota entered Formula One it turned to Good Fabs as a supplier.
McLaren, third in the constructors' championship that year, was
still amongst its customers. Other F1 operations that have sourced
from Good Fabs since then are BAR/Honda, Arrows, Jordan, Minardi,
Renault, Midland, Spyker, Force India, Asiatech and, most recently,
the new for 2010 Hispania-Cosworth team. When, in 2008, long-term
customer Prodrive assembled the first Lola-chassied Aston
Martin-engined Le Mans prototype since the 1960s, it also used Good
Fabs bends. Another loyal sports car customer has been Rollcentre's
Martin Short who has used Good Fabs systems on his Radical LMP2 car
as well as his Moslers, one of which won the Britcar 24-hour race
at Silverstone in 2005.
Although Honda withdrew from the World Championship in 2008,
Good Fabs again grew its Formula One business so that, during the
2011 season, it supplied product to over one-third of the cars
including outright Grand Prix winners. Other European customers are
to be found in Formula Two, the World and British Touring Car
Championships as well as the Swedish supercar manufacturer
Koenigsegg.
The company has also entered the motorcycle world through
collaboration with Austin
Racing. Exhausts systems, designed by Austin Racing and
manufactured by Good Fabs, are now available for such as the
Aprilia RSV4 and the BMW S1000RR. These are thought to be the only
Inconel systems sold for bikes, although Good Fabs also fabricates
stainless steel and titanium product for Richard Austin's company.
In addition to systems for road bikes, Austin Racing supplies
product for racing and, in particular, to the British Superbike
championship teams including that of former World Superbike race
winner, Chris Walker. Austin Racing will also be providing Good
Fabs made exhausts for the all-new V4 Norton destined to appear at
the 2012 Isle of Man TT.
In 2009 Neil Morgan took over as Managing Director from Warren
Briggs. The next year Good Fabs opened a 3,000 sq ft workshop at
170-A Raceway Drive in Mooresville, North Carolina, USA in order to
better service NASCAR teams, Subaru Rally Team USA and its other
North American customers. These now range from ESPN X Games
competitor Vermont Sportscar Rallying to Pro-Stock bike drag teams.
The US operation now has fully trained local staff.
* Ian Wagstaff is a freelance journalist specializing in
motorsport and the automotive components industry. A member of the
Guild of Motoring Writers, he writes regularly for a number of
magazines in both Europe and the USA including Racecar Engineering,
Race Engine Technology, Performance Racing Industry,
ATZautotechnology, The Red Bulletin, Car & Accessory Trader and
Import Automotive Parts & Accessories. Also PR consultant to
Zytek Motorsport and the SPEED EuroSeries. In 2006 he was awarded
the Mercedes Benz Montagu of Beaulieu Trophy for his book 'The
British at Le Mans'. He was also given the Guild's Pierre Dreyfus
Award in 1986.
His latest books are the 'The British at Indianapolis',
which won the Association of American Auto Writers and Broadcasters
Book of the Year award for 2010 and 'Audi R8', which was published
in 2011. He is currently working on a 'manual' for Haynes about the
World Championship winning Lotus 72.