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AN OLYMPIC EFFORT By Dan Smith An archery manufacturing company in Madison Heights figuratively stood on a lot of medal stands at the recent Olympic games in Tokyo. The phone has been ringing a lot at TruBall/ AXCEL Archery near Lynchburg since the Summer Olympic Games finished in early August. That is because the 36-year-old, 110-emloyee company in Madison Heights was at center stage in the archery competitions. This is not new for AXCEL. The individual overall male gold medal winner in the last three Olympics has used its sites and stabilizer bars. “We make everything here in our factory, says Benjamin Summers, the 45-year-old who runs the company his father, Greg, founded with his brother, Dan, as Summers and Sons. It began as a machine shop. Today, Greg and his wife, Margaret, each owns 50 percent of the business which is housed in three buildings containing 40,000 square feet. Dan broke away some years to form his own company, Quality Archery Designs. Greg, “who is past retirement age, comes to work every day and designs new products,” says Ben “He is a mechanical genius and is the biggest fan of archery in the world.” The machine shop portion of the business
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remains brisk, and its clients include some of the biggest manufacturers in Central Virginia, says Ben Summers. But it is the move to archery equipment that has given S&S its new name and its international reputation. “It is about 90 percent of what we do,” says Ben Summers. He adds that Truball/AXCEL is one of just two companies in the world doing what it does and the other is in Japan. He travels the world drumming up business. This past Olympics speaks of the company’s success worldwide, since people standing on the medal podiums represented Korea, Italy, Germany, Russia, Mexico, Turkey and the Netherlands. In total, says Ben Summers, “46 of 64 Olympic men used something we make on their bows and 33 of 64 women across all teams used our products.” Truball/AXCEL’s many clients have also included a flock of American men and women champions. Their products are all made in the U.S. and use natural materials (carbon and flax), more than 95 percent of which is recycled, Ben Summers says. The bar and sites are “known