the ancient art of
military logistics
Re: “mission possible,” June 2009
Great article about the transition
efforts under way in Iraq. DC VELOCITY
has done an excellent job updating readers on the efforts of our military forces
around the world. Since “logistics” was
born out of ancient military campaigns,
it is only natural that the magazine continue to feature these types of articles. I
also enjoyed the fact that the logistician
was a female.
Scott Mc Williams, OHL
well, duh!
Re: “the fatal flaw in ERP,” Tech Watch,
March 2009
Of course this solution [Mark Payne’s
formula for calculating how much a
company must produce to meet
demand] is right. Inventory is what is
supposed to be variable along with
demand. In the short term, production
(supply) cannot be variable.
Andrew De Witt, Tosca Ltd.
letters to the editor
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acrossthedock
Re: “cell-ing the transition,” June 2009
Mark B. Solomon’s otherwise excellent article on
hydrogen fuel cells for lift trucks included an estimate by
a battery-charger developer that a fuel cell-powered lift
truck uses three times more energy than a truck using a
battery. This statement is meaningless without specifying
both how the hydrogen is produced and how the electricity used to charge batteries is being generated.
According to an Argonne National Laboratory study published in 2008 (Full
Fuel-Cycle Comparison of Forklift Propulsion Systems), a fuel cell forklift using
hydrogen produced on site from natural gas—a technology that is commercially available from Nuvera and others—uses less energy than a battery-powered
forklift when recharged with standard U.S. grid electricity, on a national average
basis.
The Argonne National Laboratory report is available, at no cost, through the
Department of Energy’s Office of Scientific & Technical Information’s Web site:
http://www.osti.gov/bridge.
talkin’ about (energy) generation
Gus Block, Nuvera Fuel Cells
The uses are endless…
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