In 1881, the first
Foden traction engine was built in
Sandbach. In 1898, Edwin Richard Foden designed the first steam wagon to run on steel tyre wheels. This system was used successfully until 1913, by which time the development of vulcanised solid-rubber tyres enabled them to be fitted on heavy vehicles. Edwin introduced the first pneumatic-tyred Foden steam wagon, but as steam transport appeared to be going out of favour, he turned his attention to the development of a 6- to 8-ton chassis fitted with new
Gardner LW (Light Weight) high-speed oil engine. In the early 1930s, with the economy in a major recession, insurers were increasingly reluctant to underwrite steam boilers. As a result, Edwin believed the future of the lorry-building industry lay in diesel engine power; the Foden boardroom did not agree, and consequently he resigned, along with his son Dennis. With the help of Dennis and two former colleagues, including Ernest Sherratt, who became chief engineer, Edwin built the first ERF diesel lorry in 1933, and gave the first chassis the number 63, which was his age. From the beginning, the company bought components only from other suppliers rather than manufacture them itself, including engines from Gardner, gearboxes from
David Brown, and axles from
Kirkstall Forge Engineering. This concept served ERF well throughout its existence. A new cab was styled by Sandbach coachbuilder John Henry Jennings, who also provided factory space to assemble the new lorry. Based in Sandbach, the company made its own
chassis and
cab. The cab structure was made in Northampton at Air Flow Streamlines and fitted out by ERF in Sandbach. The engines came from Gardner, but later also
Cummins,
Rolls-Royce,
Perkins,
Detroit Diesel and
Caterpillar supplied them. ERFs were marketed under the
Western Star badge in some countries, such as Australia. It also built a specialist
fire-engine chassis, with a body built on by in-house company JH Jennings, later Cheshire Fire Engineering. However, when recession came in the beginning of the 1980s, and production fell from a total output of 4,000 chassis per annum, CFE was sold to management to eventually become Saxon Sanbec. ERF was never a major manufacturer; as an example, its domestic sales total reached only 1,083 trucks in 1981. The company was bought by Canadian truck maker
Western Star in June 1996. In 1999, Marshall SPV sold the Bedford parts operation to ERF, since
Western Star, their parent company would be able to produce and distribute parts better due to their worldwide network, although the
Bedford name was kept by Marshall. However, after
Paccar's purchase of Foden,
DAF Trucks and
Leyland Trucks competitive pressure increased, and after Western Star was approached by
Freightliner Trucks, the decision was made to sell ERF.
Purchase by MAN In 2000, ERF became part of
MAN, with production moving to a new factory in
Middlewich. Fraud was later discovered to have occurred at ERF, and its financial position had been incorrectly stated, with MAN winning a legal case against Freightliner. Freightliner, in turn, tried to sue Western Star and ERF's former auditors
Ernst & Young, but failed on the grounds of corporate negligence. MAN withdrew ERF from the bus market.
Final model range ERF's final model range consisted of the ECT, ECM, and ECL built on MAN's production line in
Munich (for heavy trucks), and a plant in Middlewich for light trucks, positioned to win a contract from the
Ministry of Defence for 8,000 new
British Armed Forces trucks. All the ERF trucks were based on MAN's existing products, the only difference being that the ERF model came with the option of specifying use of the Cummins
ISMe power plant. This was as an alternate to MAN's own D20
common rail power plant. The factory in Middlewich closed in March 2002, with production of the ECT moved to Munich, Germany, and ECM and ECL units moved to
Steyr, Austria, where they were built on the same facilities as their identical MAN counterparts. In the light of Cummins' intransigence on upgrading the ISMe engine to comply with the
Euro4 emission regulations, MAN initially decided to replace it completely with the new series of MAN D20 engines. With ERF badging used for only the market in the United Kingdom, MAN decided to cease supplying ERF-badged trucks from July 2007 onwards. ==References==