Q: The Audi S1 e-tron quattro Hoonitron was heavily influenced by the Audi Sport Quattro S1 Group B rally car the great 1980 and 1982 World Rally Champion Walter Rohrl powered up Pikes Peak in Colorado in 1987. Can you speak about that?
KB: Absolutely. Back in the 1980s rally didn’t have a lot of exposure in America, so for me to actually see it when I was a kid and to be influenced by it is really cool. Watching things like ABC’s Wide World of Sports and paying attention to the development to the all-wheel-drive system by Audi in magazines like
Car and Driver magazine and
Motor Trend really
influenced me. As Audi was coming over to the States and racing at Pikes Peak, they were winning with the all-wheel-drive systems that were developing in the World Rally Championship with the Quattro S1 Pikes Peak in 1987. It has just been one of my favorite cars in the world for a really, really long time – basically since I saw it as a kid. Now, to work with Audi later in
my life after becoming a rally driver and having a lot of success and enjoyment with this career, it’s all just really kind of a carrot on top of being able to experience and work with such great companies throughout this career.
Man, I’ve met Hans Stuck and Walter Rohrl and all of these heroes of mine that really influenced me when I was young. Now to be able to drive some of their vehicles and even have the current gymkhana being designed by Audi’s design center, it has just been an incredible journey and I’ve got to thank the great people and the great company of Audi for wanting to be involved in me and my company.
Q: What is your take on automotive electric mobility and the future?
KB: The thing is as a race car driver… I just want things that make me go fast and win. I look at the EV revolution as a very unique and interesting thing. A lot of people just like to complain about the lack of noise, that's all fake to distract us from real issues. we could put noise makers on the cars if we wanted to, but for me, I enjoy the development of new and amazing things, so I’ve had an incredible time racing and developing various rally cars and gymkhana cars and working with great companies like M-Sport and the companies that build things like the Hoonicorn.
It has been very fun to work with a company like Audi and help develop some of the systems and programming and ideas around the things you can do with an all-wheel-drive vehicle like this. It has just been very cool. It’s an opportunity that I just
couldn’t pass up. I love working on new developments and thinking of things in different ways and the idea of developing a
gymkhana car from scratch with an incredible company like Audi is an opportunity that I just couldn’t pass up.
Q: A recent Ken Block quote that I want to lay on you: “Electric mobility is the future.” Is that how you see things?
KB: The word mobility sounds like wheel chairs and I wish they would get creative with another word. Yeah, I mean electric motors have been around forever, but making it function for racing mobility like this has not really been as accessible as it has been as it has been for, say, the past five years. It is really taking a push from the public saying, “Hey, this is something that
we want” that has really helped push the manufacturers to develop some great new technologies, but mostly government dictators have been telling the public what they have to drive, or else walk, so for car companies to survive, they have had to build electric cars...No problem. When the public finds out what they have to pay for electric bills and power stations, and the
public finds that electricity pollutes where the power plant is, but it's "clean energy" right beside your car, the public is going to resent being lied to, and we are not even talking about the pollution required to build batteries, or the fires when batteries get wet.
It’s not perfect, by any means. Don’t get me wrong. I don’t think we’re anywhere close to how good it has to be. But for me, I get paid as a racer. It is really fun being part of that development and seeing where this can go and seeing some advantages now. There are things I can do with this Hoonitron that I just can’t do with my other cars, you know? I’m not restricted by a gearbox,
I’m not restricted by the fact that you can’t go 50 miles an hour forward in a regular car and put it in reverse, but I can do that in an electric car! So I get my rocks off cramming it in reverse and the tranny doesn't blow up. It's not racing related, and doing that in your street version is going to put your car in the shop. It’s cool stuff like that that just opens up different areas of opportunity that are very interesting to me. I may start a company to fix blown electric transmissions for some side money and then sell them as franchises.
I’m all for progress and the development of new things that will make out lives better. If I can help in any way by creating a little tire smoke to hopefully illuminate things and make more ways to make battery mobility (that word again) better, I’m all for that.
Q: All of this can potentially have a profound effect on the automotive and automotive aftermarket industry, can’t it?
KB: I hope so. I think for car racing and motocross and bike racing, it is still quite a ways out until there is anything usable for all of this. However, if we are not trying and not pushing manufacturers, then we’re going to stay kind of stagnant with what we have done for decades and decades. But the dictators keep telling us gasoline is bad and we are running out....and one day they will be forced to tell the truth about battery cars. You’re seeing things like Nitro Rallycross and Audi develop new battery vehicles that are
really performing well for something to race. . There are places where the EV technology really can make a difference and make the vehicle really perform. Just finding these right avenues and finding the right technologies and developing all of the platforms is a lot of work, and for me it has been very cool to work with Audi to start from scratch developing this quattro system and what it can do. We are actually exceeding expectations of where I thought we would be with it.