YES, THERE’S lots of money and expertise involved. But the bodies and man-hours ploughed aren’t as extensive as you think.
“Nobody here works on the Shinden full-time,” says Whittamore. “The rest of the year, these guys are working on car racing, Japanese Superbikes and our development programmes – they’re pulled in for periods to work on this. The chief designer, for example, is working on the electric motorcross bike. We only have 250 members of staff worldwide, so we can’t afford to dedicate them to this project only. It’s not quite an out-of-hours project, but it’s close.”
None of the workers had relevant experience before, either. “Many of our staff have been here their whole working life – Nishida-san was Mugen’s first employee in 1973. We don’t just get new…
