InvestorsHub Logo
icon url

Ex Blockman

10/14/09 11:46 AM

#74526 RE: gpwild #74524

Can't wait to hear the spin on that one now, lol....
icon url

Kramrer

10/14/09 12:11 PM

#74531 RE: gpwild #74524

Thanks for the email..the emails seem to get better with time.
Patience and the wait will be worth it. ;-)
icon url

OBAMASKS

10/14/09 12:13 PM

#74532 RE: gpwild #74524

WOW!!!! NICE EMAIL that is fantastic RCC/IWS will-
MANUFACTURE IN THE U.S.!!!! how COOL is that, and remember
this is just IWS under the RCCH unbrella!!! cant wait for this to start ROLLING!!!$$$$$$$$$$
icon url

Anvil

10/14/09 12:36 PM

#74537 RE: gpwild #74524

That email is the first piece of good news that I have seen in the last six months. At least there appears to be a plan. Although I have no idea what type of sales Evolutech has and obviously no idea what IWS does, if anything. But at least there is a basis for a merger.

Based on this, IMO, a uplist is doable once $10MM in revenues are generated (another 12 months.

Funny how we hear of this from Claude and not jean.
icon url

EarnestDD

10/14/09 12:37 PM

#74538 RE: gpwild #74524

And where is little RCCH going to get any money?

Last financial filed it was a money losing debt ridden company.
jmo
icon url

johnnyfiber

10/14/09 1:22 PM

#74548 RE: gpwild #74524

At $51,000 cost per high rise building...there will need to be 196 installations over a 1 year period to achieve $10 million in sales. Working 7 days a week for 365 days the company will need to average an installation every 1.86 days.



Claude Hebert, president of Evolu-Tech Ltd. in Montreal was among the Canadian company representatives who traveled to Atlanta last week for the trade mission, which was managed by Greener Atlanta, an environmental consulting firm.

Mr. Hebert’s company has patented a process that uses magnets instead of chemicals to remove the limescale mineral deposits that form in the water pipes in commercial buildings.

“Scale is a big problem,” Mr. Hebert told GlobalAtlanta. “We’re talking energy loss, we’re talking pipes plugging up, breakdown of pumps.”

A high-rise building in Montreal was spending $35,000 a year in chemicals to clean its pipes, said Mr. Herbert. With his company’s system, chemical costs were eliminated, replaced by $1,500 per year for filters. The system cost about $51,000 to install.

“The payback is in about 18 months,” said Mr. Hebert.

http://globalatlanta.com/article/22498/