I see the crack supply in the UK located Exhaust sleaze once again.
@mr.Lifter
Have you noticed that this bloke now resides closer to you. Used to be in Dubai, UAE but now Halifax, UK. Hope that is not close to you.
So true John, we have been listening to the same old bullsh*t now for 10 years and still no proof of a real truck, the guy must be totally deluded.
He has been asked on a number of occasions to show some sort of proof of a real machine and not cartoons but he has never stepped up and done this so one can only assume its a pipe dream!
The only thing that will be built/introduced in the 4th quarter of this year is a deeper "Credibility Gap"
Like I said the truck will be out in the fourth Quarter of this year, The truck will be the biggest revolution in the History of counter balance forklifts, Not only will it be the first truly modular constructed truck that will allow for the exchange of units. Allowing for longer truck life and less down time. It will also meet the customers needs of tomorrow as it is fully connected to the cloud and is 100% zero emission with out the need to plug the truck in to recharge or have recharging infrastructure.
oh please
this has been going on for years now exhalt
people don't take too kindly to empty promises man
Your best bet is to just stay quiet till you ACTUALLY HAVE IT.
well it will definitely worth the wait,
exhalt - suggest you go back and count every time count how many times you have state emphatically the introduction time period of this 'world beater' Lego style truck in the past.
Your historical comments reminds me of a book I read in elementary school "The Boy Who Cried Wolf" an Aesops fable.
Well The new truck that will change the global counter balance forklift market will be out in the fourth Quarter this year.
As for you saying that automation will not catch on, It will be the likes of Amazon that drives this and Amazon will make it work.
As for your prediction about Diesel, Diesel will be gone before 10 years the cost and complexity of tier V will go along way to the end of Diesel. The main reason will be companies are not only looking at their own carbon footprint but also the carbon foot print of their supply chain. So companies wanting to stay in business will change to meet their customer requirements. Cites and Governments are making Clean air areas, in the UK London is doing this is the transport industry and will soon be looking at all other industries so this change will be forced on to people it will be change or face high cost of running old Diesel equipment. One way could be having a carbon Tax on Diesel that would make it uncompetitive to run diesel trucks.
At least you were correct on Hyster the fuel cell wont catch on and hyster will have to right off hundreds of Millions of Dollars on this
first off i'd like to ask you...
wheres your miracle lift? the one you say is going to change the material handling market as you claim here?
before you come in touting this nonsense you should think about that before you go on promoting something that doesn't work well because of inferior technology and the cost of keeping it up.
Here in the USA
I've seen way to many companies go down this path only to revert back from automation to manual labor employee's that are much less costly in the long run. People are catching on to this trend to push full automation forcing millions of people out of work and companies realizing the cost of the grossly misrepresented technology and then the cost of maintenance repairs and upkeep skyrocketing. We are decades away from anything like that and frankly speaking automation will never fully take over ever.
As far as hyster and the hydrogen cell? that never caught on because of what i previously said, it doesn't work, is way too costly, nobody wants that. MCFA went down that road 10yrs ago when it first came out and quickly realized it was not viable enough to pursue so they scaled it back quite a bit and they moved on to the new standards for diesels with DPF systems and electrics. In fact most mfg's have gone down this more reasonable path now, and of course along with that there is the required special training for tech's to be qualified to work on these systems. Also many companies have toyed with the prospect of using PNG systems but that too in itself was found to be very expensive and just didn't take hold in the market that well.
This global initiative being pushed out by the WTO is a bad idea and only serves one purpose, making the top officials $$$ while the lower workers suffer through failures one after another only to be laid off IF this plan succeeds. This is why diesel and gas and LPG products are not going anywhere anytime soon, they will be here long after your 10yr prediction sir.
Before you gain any credibility in anyone's eyes you should produce your past offerings before bringing anything new product related or otherwise to the table.