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				Fecha de Ingreso: Jan  2004 Edad: 45 
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				 Re: ¿ Que pasa con Pison Spyder ? 
 
			
			
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					Empezado por Giovanni   |  mmmm.. quebró??? nop
 
se aburrio el dueño de la producción masiva y se va a tirar con un taller chico q fabrica solo beadlocks
 
	Cita: 
	
		| Poison Spyder Customs Reorganizes 
 It has been rumored that Poison Spyder was closing, having problems or
 just reorganizing. I recently addressed some of this on the boards, if
 you read closely you would have caught that I was contemplating another
 direction at that time. I have entertained a change for over a year now
 and finally pulled the trigger. I'am closing Poison Spyder customs down
 in it's current form, as a full manufacturer.
 
 
 I originally started out building Baja bugs at age 15, learned allot
 but moved on to Jeeps. Had a five year gig with the army in a Special
 forces unit as a commo specialist and Thai linguist, after an injury was
 forced to redirect my life plan. I never forgot the off road world, and
 figured I would try to find a place in it. Worked at a small shop called
 Wilderness off road, then to 4 Wheel parts doing special projects while
 writing for 4X4 Power and JP magazine. Partnered with my buddy Steve
 Rumore, sold my house, paid all of my debts and moved into 1000 ft. shop
 in the heart of Denver. Steve maintaining the sister shop in
 Bayfeild,Colorado. This was Avalanche engineering. My dogs and I lived
 at various shops for six years as the company grew through the Avalanche
 days and then separated into Poison Spyder customs. Bringing along a
 heritage of innovation and style that is still part of the modern DNA of
 the rock machines built today. We grew from those meager days to a fully
 encapsulated and self sufficient manufacturer. As I reflect over the
 past twenty five years in the dirt world, owning an off road company of
 Poison Spyder's size and abilities should have been the pinnacle. When I
 got to the top of that mountain I found myself looking back wishing I
 had stopped somewhere along the way.
 
 
 The above is very summarized history, all a continued evolution built
 on vehicles and component innovation. One of the first questions
 everyone poses to me is what are you going to do with all of the parts,
 are you still going to build any of them? No, with a couple of
 exceptions. Another popular inquiry is where can I get equivalent
 parts? Even with our components in the grasp of mimicking companies,
 they could never seem to find the recipe, the perfect combination of
 function and style that we always aspired to. So to this question I
 don't have an answer. We grew as a company with our foundation in hard
 core components, parts that had never been seen or conjured up before.
 For those of you that were wheeling in the late eighties and early
 ninety's, you can remember when chrome tube bumpers and diamond plate
 were the cutting edge. We the renegade hard cores of those days that
 could be seen running the trails with full width axles, exotic
 suspensions and these gnarly looking mud tires called Swampers. We
 couldn't travel the ever escalating trails we were pushing with the off
 the shelf equipment that was available then. Those parts were more
 inspired by show truck fashion, and was not the answer for the direction
 the off road world was destined to follow. Regrettably I'am not driven
 to continue building and creating some of the best hard core parts in
 our industry on a production level.
 
 
 Many people have passed through over the years, I would like to
 mention several stand outs that were and are integral in our growth and
 success:
 Steve Rumore: A good friend, one of the only people in our
 industry that could really impress me
 Tim Turner: Best fab tech I ever had, an eccentric for sure,
 but the great ones always are
 Paul Herrera: A great organizer, the last one standing a 4AM when
 something had to get done, huge potential to further himself in the industry
 Curt Sadler: A jack of all trades, could cover any position in
 the company and do it well, and a good friend
 Larry wood: A consistent rock of reliability, a trusted cohort,
 worked at Spyder longer than anyone
 AJ Slay: Always a positive force at the shop, the best sales
 person we have ever had, kept me in touch with reality
 Bret Glassett: A creative mind that elevated our company on many
 levels and a respectable wheeler
 Chris Kreutzer: Another individual that came with many unique
 skills that pushed us upward
 Karl Westendorf: A company first man, always looked out for my
 and Poison Spyders best interest, most capable
 
 
 So what is to become of Poison Spyder customs? AJ, our daughter, two
 dogs and I are moving to Luckenbach Texas... well not in a literal
 sense. However we are going to re-open the first week of November in our
 new shop. We are leaving behind the tasking dynamics of a large
 business, staff and burdens that have grown with us over the years.
 Going back in time to a shop only a hundred yards from my second shop
 off of Titan court. Our foundation being the Spyderlock bead lock line,
 of which I'am excited to focus and expand on. Further, after AJ and I
 get reorganized I will return to building Rock rods, custom machines and
 trail guiding. We greatly appreciate your patronage of Poison Spyder
 customs, and look forward to reacquainting with everyone under our new
 direction.
 
 Clifton and AJ Slay
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				 Última edición por AndR3Z fecha: 26-10-2008 a las 12:49:42
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