Category: Trucking News

WorkHound raises $500K to help carriers retain drivers

WorkHound, a software platform developed to help carriers reduce driver turnover, recently finished a $500,000 fundraising round to grow their business and help trucking companies around the country accelerate profitability by retaining their drivers.

The investment round was led by Right Side Capital Management out of San Francisco. Other participants were Dynamo Fund out of Chattanooga, TN, Twelve19 Ventures out of Des Moines, IA, and multiple angel investors.

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Wabco Boat Tail Deploys Automatically

NASHVILLE – The first new product has emerged in the wake of Wabco's purchase of Laydon Composites, and it comes in the form of a self-deploying trailer boat tail.

Introduced at the Technology & Maintenance Council annual meeting this week, the OptiFlow AutoTail automatically deploys at 45 mph and closes at 10 mph, drawing on speed data from the trailer's antilock braking system.

The automated opening helps to ensure that the potential aerodynamic benefits are always realized at highway speeds, while the closing will help to ensure the equipment is not damaged when a trailer is backed into a loading dock.

OptiFlow AutoTail earned an EPA SmartWay designation through tests by Canada's National Research Council. Tests show the panels can improve fuel economy by up to 4.3% at highway speeds, reducing carbon dioxide emissions by 4.8 tons per trailer per year.

The device differs from a competing system in several ways. Rather than using hinges, the panels use cantilevers to swing into place. They're also shaped for better aerodynamic flow, only 21 inches wide, and made of injection-molded thermoplastic.

It was a rapid development process. Wabco purchased Laydon Composites in April 2016, and the Ontario company's former President Brian Layfield (now Wabo's global leader - aerodynamics) said his team had barely discussed the technology at the time of the sale. But now the business has the backing of a global company behind it.

“It's been for me really rewarding going from three engineers. I now have the ability to tap into 2,400 engineers,” Layfield said, referring to available support and cost synergies. Wabco, meanwhile, is looking to maintain the group's entrepreneurial spirit.

“In the end it's all about getting out of the way,” said Jon Morrison, Wabco president - Americas. “We recognize what we know and what we don't know.”

Laydon certainly understood aerodynamics. Answering a challenge presented ...Read the rest of this story

Cummins X15 Efficiency Wins TWNA Technical Achievement Award

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Cummins X15 Efficiency diesel's advanced combustion design merited the 2016 Technical Achievement Award. Photo: Cummins

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Cummins X15 Efficiency diesel's advanced combustion design merited the 2016 Technical Achievement Award. Photo: Cummins

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The Cummins X15 Efficiency Series diesel has won the Truck Writers of North America's 2016 Technical Achievement Award.

The award was presented during an awards luncheon at the American Trucking Associations Technology & Maintenance Council's annual meeting in Nashville, Tenn.

Cummins redesigned its ISX15 to meet 2017 federal greenhouse gas and fuel economy requirements, and introduced two models called X15 Performance and X15 Efficiency. The Efficiency version employs an Atkinson Cycle in its valve action that adds fuel efficiency important to fleet managers, said John Baxter, a freelance technical writer, former mechanic and a member of the TWNA panel. That caught the attention of his colleagues in the voting.

“The engine won for its advanced combustion design that includes a little-used Atkinson Cycle, and other features,” explained Jim Park, chairman of the TWNA awards committee and Heavy Duty Trucking equipment editor. “It beat out four other finalists who had previously topped a pool of 15 candidates for the award. A panel of industry journalists from Canada and the U.S. debated and voted over a period of several weeks.”

The 14.9-liter diesel gains 3% in fuel efficiency over the preceding model, the ISX15, through improvements to air-handling, combustion efficiency, reduced parasitic losses and advanced electronics, Proctor said. Maintenance should cost 40% less than previous engines over five years, according to Cummins.

“The engine's valve events are modified so that compression is slightly limited, allowing for greater-than-normal expansion during the power stroke that follows,” he explained. “That means that the gases expand to 20 times their volume at the pistons' top center by the time they are released, as opposed to standard expansion factors in the range of 15-17 to 1. Allowing the burning gases more room to expand captures energy ...Read the rest of this story