Author: Vitaliy Dadalyan

General Electric Company Stock Is Still a Buy in This Mess

Early this month (and not for the first time), I suggested General Electric Company (NYSE:GE) was a buy, in spite of the spate of bad news that's dogged General Electric stock for the past several months. Since then, things got worse for the company, and General Electric stock has fallen more than 10%. All the same, even with the bad-news bombs that were dropped on investors just within the past few days, I'm sticking with my original thesis … that GE is at or near a bottom that makes it more of an opportunity than a liability.


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DPF Maintenance Can Sideline A Truck for Days

A truck driver may not know when to address a DPF regen warning, which can costs fleets days of downtime if it requires advanced service. Photo: Jim Park

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Parked forced regenerations of diesel particulate filters continue to frustrate and confuse drivers. Drivers under time constraints often tempt fate and continue their journeys, ignoring regen requests. A system derate or shutdown can sideline a truck for a couple of days if the DPF requires advanced service.

Newer post-2010 trucks are a little more forgiving in their warnings.

“On older engines, before the advent of the SCR [selective catalytic reduction] system, drivers generally had three to four hours between the time the light came on and when you absolutely had to perform a regen,” says Scott Barraclough, Mack technology product manager. “Newer trucks offer at least eight hours from the time of the first alert and when it must be regen'd. That allows drivers to get through a shift or at least find a convenient time and place to park.”

The bad news is that there are still lots of older systems running around, and drivers need to be aware of different alerts and warnings on trucks of different makes, models and ages.

“Drivers need to be aware of the system on the truck and they must follow the prompts and instructions provided by the truck,” Barraclough says.

Trucks should be equipped with instructions outlining the parked regen procedures to avoid confusion.

While drivers can't influence the vehicle's duty cycle, they should be mindful of the impact of behaviors such as idling.

“Light loads and stop-and-go driving certainly play a factor in DPF regeneration performance, as additional soot is created during erratic duty cycles and/or stop-and-go traffic,” says Kurt Swihart, Kenworth marketing director. “This, along with lack of exhaust heat from light engine loads and extended idling periods, will ...Read the rest of this story