bosley
- 20 Feb 2004 09:34
greekman
- 21 Aug 2006 13:26
- 19204 of 27111
Garyble,
I think the best advice is no advice. It's a case of 'you pays your money, you takes your chance'.
cynic
- 21 Aug 2006 13:31
- 19205 of 27111
garbyle ..... if you want to make money on SEO, i reckon there is a better chance by shorting, but with a wide spread (aboutv 25% i think), that is also not easy ..... imo, and i have been consistent on this ever since i came acroiss the share, get out and stay out.
garyble
- 21 Aug 2006 13:34
- 19206 of 27111
Thanks cynic,
So the likelihood is, I still have a chance of building a substantial holding all the way down.
garyble
- 21 Aug 2006 13:38
- 19207 of 27111
Greekman,
Not looking for advice just opinion, also the silence was deafening!
I am contemplating selling a few to buy back as these will continue to drift downwards untill we get positive news, or leak of same.
Decisions, decisions........
cynic
- 21 Aug 2006 13:43
- 19208 of 27111
perhaps a shame that we are now in a paperless society where share certs are no longer issued, otherwise you might have accumulated enough to repaper the house!
greekman
- 21 Aug 2006 14:48
- 19209 of 27111
Garyble,
Appreciate that.
I was not going to post, but as you say the silence was deafening.
I did though expect the rampers/de-rampers to come back to you.
Don't really see how advice re these boards can assist further. I think we have done the present situation to death. Whatever you do, buy, sell or hold, best of luck.
My opinion. I still think SEO will come good, but haven't a clue when.
I am no where near confident enough to buy more.
garyble
- 21 Aug 2006 15:54
- 19211 of 27111
OK,
Have just made a sell order for 320k shares, so will see how things fare from here on in.
If it drops 25%+ I'll re-buy.
Basically bored of waiting and hoping to get a few more. Better than just sitting here shooting the breeze and watching it gradually fall.
garyble
- 21 Aug 2006 15:57
- 19212 of 27111
Tempting fate....especially on the cusp of RNS Tuesday!
mtwallit
- 21 Aug 2006 17:19
- 19213 of 27111
it would be nice to get some sense on this board, instead of rumour, counter rumour and vapourware - although I think my breath is wasted somehow
:-)
markusantonius
- 21 Aug 2006 18:26
- 19214 of 27111
I may return to the fold if the offer price slides towards a penny - which might very well happen, at this rate!
Mad Pad
- 22 Aug 2006 08:31
- 19215 of 27111
Post on the other side re Ultrasonic Packaging,looks good to me ,anyone know of the downside ?
hewittalan6
- 22 Aug 2006 08:33
- 19216 of 27111
Dunno. What does the post say?
aldwickk
- 22 Aug 2006 08:38
- 19217 of 27111
http://www.branson-plasticsjoin.com/applications_packaging.asp
The Ultrasonic Benefit Package
The ultrasonic process provides many benefits for packaging; it is clean, consistent, and reliable. And:
It is energy-efficient and economical. Energy is needed and expended only at the precise location and area of the bond site.
There is no warm-up time and no need for constant temperature maintenance. Unlike the RF process or heat sealing, ultrasonics does not generate excessive heat.
The ultrasonic process is up to four times faster than RF sealing. Bonding of the material usually occurs in milliseconds and requires no recovery time.
No costly, potentially contaminating consumables, such as adhesives, staples, or solvents, are required. The resulting package is environmentally safe and recyclable.
It can seal through contaminants (i.e., liquids, oils, powders) that may be present in the sealing area without compromising weldability.
Ultrasonic equipment and components can be easily automated and are compatible with material handling systems.
Microprocessor-based or customer supplied controls allow precise settings which can be changed quickly with parameter storage and recall capabilities. Advanced controls and alarm capabilities ensure optimum operation and output.
SEO OLD TECHNOLOGY LOL!.
predator3 - 21 Aug'06 - 12:35 - 65081 of 65111
Branson's In-Line Clamshell Packaging System
While the most common method of ultrasonically welding clamshell packages is a manual plunge welding system, which requires a bar horn and specialized fixture, the Branson In-Line Clamshell system provides processors with flexibility and increased processing speed by eliminating the need for manual loading and unloading. Parts are simply scanned through. Adjustments for different configurations are easily made.
Ultrasonics offers immediate startup with no preheating, and is thus a fast, clean, reliable, and energy-efficient alternative to heat and RF sealing. The process seals despite product residue, steam, or vapor, imparts no heat to package contents, seals new and reclaimed materials, and eliminates consumables such as adhesives and staples, and is itself contaminant free.
hewittalan6
- 22 Aug 2006 08:47
- 19218 of 27111
Are there any scientific types out there who can tell me the difference between ultrasonic and radio frequency???
Would I be right in assuming that they are both simply disturbances in the electromagnetic field, but the frequency range is higher on RF than on ultrasonic??
Thanks,
Alan
Mad Pad
- 22 Aug 2006 09:20
- 19219 of 27111
Alan see 65082 on other board
hewittalan6
- 22 Aug 2006 09:21
- 19220 of 27111
Not a member and never go on there, MP.
Too much bitchin for my tastes. ;-)
Alan
Tonyrelaxes
- 22 Aug 2006 09:26
- 19221 of 27111
I can't cut'nPaste it - I have the poster on filter and my principles exceed my curiosity.
bosley
- 22 Aug 2006 09:33
- 19222 of 27111
is this new news or just old stuff rehashed as i seem to remember ii posted similar stuff last year.
Mad Pad
- 22 Aug 2006 09:36
- 19223 of 27111
Aldwick can you repost it for what its worth ,thanks.