The Old (above) and New GreenShift Logo HERE
I see the Corn Extraction Picture has also been updated. Notice the upscale floor at the facility. Not the regular finished concrete one would expect at a typical Ethanol Plant.
SkunK
I am the SkunKhunter. I hunt down SkunK stocks. Those are stocks that have been beat down past any reasonable justification. I try to ride the stock up as market forces eventually right the ship of PPS. A SkunK is not a herd animal. He is a scavenger who knows that arriving before the herd means big profits and clean shoes. This is the journey of the GreenShift Corporation. Updated weekly between COB Friday and Sunday evening. (Disclaimers on Bottom of Site)
15 comments:
As I have stated, it is not difficult or expensive to update an existing web site.
What plant is this pic from?
Nobody,
First you complained they have not updated the site. So, now they have and then you comeback with " it is not difficult or expensive to update an existing web site.. Never say anything positive about Greenshift, then why the hell are you here you jerk.
Get the hell out of here as we are all sick of you. Anything good comes ouf of Greenshift, you never mention it or speak positive about it.
Leave you freakin JERK! Get a life and so sorry you have a miserable life. Don't go out of your way to make others miserable.
Get help!!
You may recall that several posters here and elsewhere claimed that the reason the GERS web site was allowed to become out of date was the cost and difficulty of updating it. I was castigated as you are now doing for saying the obvious. Then GERS added an IRS form to the web site and my detractors vanished. The point is, that the state and quality of information of the web site had nothing to do with cost -- other factors were in play. These factors may have been important to our understanding what is going on with our company.
Now if you would identify yourself as you do on I-Hub and elsewhere, your assassinations would have more credibility. Until then try anger management.
Who cares get over it.
Skunk,
The flooring isn't upscale, it's upstairs. It's a steel grating type of flooring that is common for upper levels of ethanol plants. I've worked in an ethanol plant and bean oil plant and they both used the steel grating for their upper levels.
Probably the ones icm or poet has
Or the ones Chief Ethanol and AGP have.
Updated Website Photo...
I believe the updated photo was taken at United Ethanol. You can see the same interior of white walls with cables going through maroone support beams from the pictures on United's site. This confirms what I've long suspected, United Ethanol installed an Alfa-Laval!
http://www.unitedethanol.com/index.cfm?show=65&mid=39&page=ALL
Man, that is one sexy looking machine!
Slash your terrible. You can't say where this picture is stop pumping. Standard metal buildings have the same structures
"The flooring isn't upscale, it's upstairs."
Now I can see the railing to the far left. Now it makes more sense. I was like where are the semi-solids going? I bet they get routed through the floor.
Was this done to help isolate the noise that these things reportedly make? You would think the vibration wuold shake the place. Or was it done to just facilitate the flow?
That is NOT United.
The plant is Advance BioEnergy in Nebraska. It is a ICM 110. It is not a Greenshift install. The centrifuge manufacture suppied the machines directly to the plant. No heating step. GERS is only collecting 12% from the customer on corn oil sold.
It is not a Greenshift install???
Of all the installs why do you think GERS picked an ICM install to feature THEIR obvious alpha (or as you say ICM)
That being said , they may have contracted ICM to turn the bolts, after all GreenShift has less than 15 employees. Hard to keep up with all the customers when you got the patents.
No. The truth was that the cstomer chose to deal directly with the centrifuge manufacturer rather then buy a module through greenshift.....you do the math.
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