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Meet Kobussen Trailways’ Dave Meyerhofer (by Pat Plodzeen

Meet Kobussen Trailways’ Dave Meyerhofer

Three-Time Champion of UMA Maintenance Competition

by Pat Plodzeen

Dave Meyerhofer is a lead mechanic at Kobussen Trailways in Kaukauna, Wisconsin, where he focuses his talents on the 25 motorcoaches operated by the company. He took first place in the 2022 Maintenance interchange at the UMA show in Long Beach, making this his third win and seventh trophy in his eight years participating in this event. He is shown here during the 2022 competition, sponsored by ABC Companies, where he won a cash prize of $2,500. UMA.

Trailways’ signature red logo grabs attention and conveys fun, but that is not the only reason Trailways-branded coaches look so good going down the road. Credit also goes to knowledgeable, seasoned mechanics and maintenance teams who can not be beat for keeping Trailways’ fleets pristine and running to perfection.

Meet Dave Meyerhofer, a lead mechanic at Kobussen Trailways in Kaukauna, Wisconsin. He took first place at the 2022 Maintenance Interchange at UMA Expo in Long Beach, California, marking his third firstplace win and seventh trophy in his eight years participating in the industry ’s most challenging maintenance competition. Meyerhofer also holds several amateur race car trophies and works on race cars as a hobby he enjoys with his son.

Sponsored by ABC Companies, the 24th annual UMA competition includes nearly two dozen professionals, representing motorcoach companies across North America, who compete by answering 50 questions on a written test and finding eight to 10 rigged defects on two motorcoaches in the fastest time. In the 2022 challenge, Meyerhofer was the only one to catch an incorrect rear backup light and achieved the highest overall score with a cash prize of $2,500.

Meyerhofer attributes his mechanical aptitude to growing up on a farm where he fixed and repaired machinery. He joined Kobussen Trailways as a mechanic in 1990 out of high school, working on school buses. Now, with a fleet of 1,000 buses of all types, Meyerhofer focuses on his company ’s 25 motorcoaches and leads a team of technicians at the company ’s headquarters. He also trouble-shoots equipment issues at the company ’s 22 locations throughout Wisconsin. “I got in with a very good company and plan to finish out my career here, ” says Meyerhofer. “I like my work and I treat the coaches like they are my very own.

Meyerhofer, who has taken “as many technical training courses from manufacturers as possible, ” recommends mechanics focus on electronics. “Anybody can change nuts, but today ’s new buses have 15 computers. You have to keep up your education to excel, ” he says.

Excellent roadside assistance is never far away when you are a Trailways carrier. “Breakdowns happen and just recently I contacted Thrasher Brothers Trailways in Alabama for assistance. Alan Thrasher himself went out to look after our coach, ” said Meyerhofer. “No one (in Trailways) ever turns anyone away and we won’t either.

When not at a Kobussen garage, you will find Meyerhofer working on his two street stock Chevys, a ’99 Monte Carlo and 2020 Camaro. His racing hobby started when he was35,leadinghimto10stockcarracingwins. Now retired from racing, Meyerhofer volunteers as crew chief for his son and nephew ’s racing team that participates in nearly 40 stock car races in the Mid-Am Racing Series each year in Wisconsin, Illinois and Iowa. q

When not working on coaches, Dave Meyerhofer can often be found working on his two street stock Chevys, a 1999 Monte Carlo and a 2020 Camero. In earlier years, Meyerhofer was active in racing and had 10 stock car racing wins. Today, he volunteers as crew chief for his son and nephew’s racing team. KOBUSSEN

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