Showing posts with label Carrier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carrier. Show all posts

Sunday, 7 April 2013

Logistics Veterans Introduce Truck Carrier Search Site

JOC Staff | Feb 27, 2013 9:32AM EST

Logistics veterans John Labrie and Sean Devine have launched buytruckload.com, a new Chicago-based service in the transportation procurement space, initially offering a search to help shippers find prospective carriers and a survey to improve internal processes.

The carrier search leverages a database of every carrier and broker in the U.S. and supports search by equipment, size, location, age, safety, authority and more. Registration for the site is free.

Before founding buytruckload.com, Labrie was president of CRST Expedite, president of Con-way Freight, executive vice president of strategy and enterprise operations at Con-way and president of Con-way Freight Western.

Devine was previously vice president of strategy and transportation purchasing at Echo Global Logistics, vice president of pricing and engineering at Con-way Freight, vice president of enterprise engineering at Con-way, vice president of consulting at Emptoris (now IBM) and vice president of products and services at CombinetNet.


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Wednesday, 17 October 2012

SCL shipper, carrier panel looks at costs, outlook for 2013

MISSISSAUGA, Ont., -- Shippers and carriers met to discuss costs and challenges ahead for 2013 during Supply Chain Canada’s breakfast seminar this week in Mississauga.

Lou Smyrlis, Editorial Director, Transportation Media, spoke of the volatile and fragile economic recovery faced by countries worldwide and how Canadian shippers and carriers thought these challenges might play out in their businesses.

Jim McKay, Walmart Canada Corp’s Director, Transportation, said the company would focus on reliability with respect to servicing its stores and DCs in 2013. Fuel efficiency, and keeping costs low would also be key areas of focus.

Ian Murray, General Manager, Marketing, with Canadian Pacific Rail, said the number one driver of change for 2013 will the change in leadership at the railway under new CEO Hunter Harrison.

“There will be a huge focus to move the needle on reliability and speed, foundational to what we’re doing, and to moving assets more efficiently while controlling costs,” said Murray.

Doug Munro, President, Maritime-Ontario Freight Lines Limited, said there are challenges ahead in trying to get compensatory rates in a market of overcapacity and stagnant growth.

“It’s trying to get top line revenue when costs on the bottom are pushing up all the time. It’s about maintaining margins,” said Munro.

Excess capacity is also a major issue for the marine sector, said Michael Broad, President, Shipping Federation, as is slow trade growth worldwide.

“Record numbers of containerships, along with swelling international trade, and the high cost of inputs, are the three issues of concern,” he said.

In terms of priorities heading into 2013, Murray said service quality would be at the top of the list.

“It’s making sure we’re making commitments and delivering to those commitments, and controlling our resources much more closely than we have in the past,” he said.

Keeping service levels up is also a priority for Munro.

“It’s educating customers on the one hand, but with the markets so competitive we have to maintain a high level of service. Without that, nothing else matters. My outlook is that 2013 is going to be a bit of a tough year but I think we’re getting a bit of market share from our competitors,” he said.

Walmart Canada’s McKay said 2013 will be about finding increased reliability through relationships, and also about fuel, cost mitigation and balancing the inbound and outbound flow of goods.

“Global trade is expected to increase 3-5 %. We’re hoping for the best but will have to take a look at controlling costs and keeping efficient,” said Broad of the marine industry outlook.

Murray noted there is ample room for collaboration between the modes in the year ahead.


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Saturday, 29 October 2011

Carrier Transicold claims to offer quietest reefer

ATHENS, Ga. -- Carrier Transicold has announced that recent company testing has determined its hybrid Vector trailer refrigeration unit (TRU) is the quietest diesel-powered reefer on the market.

The Vector 6500 single-temperature unit was tested by Carrier Transicold to ARI Standard 1120 and compared to a competitive unit of comparable capacity equipped with a factory-installed sound reduction package, the company claimed. It found that when running in high-speed cooling mode, the Vector was six decibels quieter than its rival.

"Putting this into perspective, it would take four Vector units running in high-speed cooling mode to produce the sound volume of a single conventional competitive unit equipped with a noise abatement package," said Dave Kiefer, Carrier Transicold's director of marketing and product management.

The company also noted its Vector TRU provides heating using electric resistance strips, which do not require the use of the compressor and result in even quieter heating.

In high-speed heat mode, Carrier Transicold said its Vector unit was 10 decibels quieter than the competitor.

The company chalks its quietness up to an all-electric refrigeration system that has fewer components that contribute to engine and compressor noise. It also features a noise-reducing V-Force condenser fan with vortex-suppression technology. Both the Vector 6500 and the Vector 6600MT also feature a bottom panel that further contains engine sound, the company says.

"Hauling operations that are seeking the quietest choice in high-capacity trailer refrigeration systems should consider the Vector units," Kiefer said. "Although conventional trailer refrigeration systems, including Carrier's X2 series, have been designed over the years to perform more quietly, the issue of noise is more relevant than ever."


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