Cycle News

Cycle News 2019 Issue 41 October 15

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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VOLUME 56 ISSUE 41 OCTOBER 15, 2019 P93 A machine laser cuts the eye port. This is one of the very, very few steps that is trusted to a machine and not human hands. around me, it's immediately apparent that the human touch is absolutely essential to Arai's philosophy. A company with al- most 400 employees spread across four factories in Omiy-ku, the major manu- facturing plant in Shinto, the Katayanagi assembly plant and another facility at Amanuma, Arai still firmly believes in hu- man accountability over letting machines and algorithms do most the work. Unlike many helmet manufacturers, Arai has complete control over every step from the first laying of fiberglass to the boxing of a freshly finished helmet. Almost nothing is outsourced, nothing left to chance. It's been this way forever since founder Hirotake Arai created a hard-hat company that would eventually be used for the Japa- nese Imperial Army in World War II. A bit of a maverick, Hirotake is the guy depicted in the famous photo of the young man in a top hat standing on the seat of a moving Harley-Da- vidson that Arai uses in its advertisements. "Those people [soldiers] over in south- east Asia were fighting in the hot weather," says Arai Helmets 81-year-old president and CEO—and Hirotake's son—Mitchio (Mitch) Arai, who will soon pass the company onto These 20-odd parts are what make up a Regent-X shell before baking. his son, 45-year-old Akihito Arai. "They needed some heat isolation. My father came up with a hat using bamboo. The Japanese army liked that idea, so they asked him to do some more for them. But he did not make helmets—there was a company in Tokyo doing that for the army." Arai's first manufacturing plant, on the site where our story began, opened in 1937, the only large scale fac- tory in a sea of farming and agricultural land. It was a far cry from the bustling metropolis Omiy-ku, is now. Following the cessation of hostilities, in the early 1950s, Arai became the helmet manufacturer we all know today. At the time, it was near impossible to import a helmet as the country rebuilt from the war, so it fell on Hirotake to make a helmet himself. The company was initially called HA (Hirotake Arai) and only changed its name to Arai late in the 1960s. Hirotake can also take credit for the creation of what would become the basis for almost every motorcycle and car helmet for all brands to follow with the imple- mentation of the foam EPS liner. Interestingly, the Ameri- can manufacturer Bell Helmets had come up with the same idea at roughly the same time (the two companies can't agree on who got there first, despite never having heard of each other at the time of the EPS creation). Yet

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