sandshark wrote:p.s. The person here who accepted my offer to test the product (on my dime) went AWOL. It was a good thought, though. Traded some private messages to get the ball rolling, then he disappeared. Hope things are Ok; tough times are common lately it seems.
Nefarious wrote:I will step up to the plate on this and take my lick. Things got really busy at work and still are luckily. I don't know if I would truly have time to run a test on it. Although I would like to. We just started two new divisions at the office that I oversee on top of the three I already oversee.
My sincerest apologies.
If you are still interested I'll give you my business email and we could correspond better, but It might take some time to do (month or so) but I understand if you aren't. again my apologies.
Alfred Tennyson wrote:We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
Press Release 01/04/18 | Industrial Nanotech, Inc. Provides 2018 Shareholder Update
NAPLES, FL—(January 4, 2018) - Industrial Nanotech, Inc. (OTC PINK: INTK), a global leader in nanotechnology-based energy saving solutions, today announced a shareholder update on company progress and corporate developments.
“Our strategy is working. Our first focus in Q4 2016 and all of 2017 was consistent profitability. Through cost cutting measures and increased focus on our more profitable product lines and customers, we have accomplished that task and we have accomplished 12 months of profitability through the end of 2017,” states Stuart Burchill, CEO/CTO of Industrial Nanotech, Inc. “Now we begin 2018 in a high revenue growth rate phase, created by continuing to cultivate and expand our relationships with our core customers and market sectors:
1) Fortune 500 Companies including, but not limited to: General Motors, International Paper, Toyota, Post, Shell Oil, Exxon, PepsiCo, Johnson & Johnson, Kellogg’s, Anheuser-Busch InBev, Samsung, and Fluor Corporation. All of these companies are either currently purchasing the Company’s products and expanding their use throughout their organization or actively in the due diligence and education/training phase prior to implementation of the use of the Company’s products.
2) Worldwide Distributors including, but not limited to: three distributors and a growing team of independent representatives in the United States, and our current network of seven well established companies representing the Company’s products in England, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Africa, South Africa, South Korea, Thailand, Malaysia, The Philippines, Indonesia, Australia, Chile, Pakistan, Dubai and Saudi Arabia.
3) New Product Development: The Company continues to work on new technologies including combined thermal insulation and corrosion prevention products that are not coatings and super high temperature thermal insulation coatings for release in 2018. Additional new products and technologies are in the early R & D stages.”
Stuart Burchill continues, “In addition, we continue to work to enhance shareholder value by increasing profitability which, in turn, we will utilize to fuel increased revenue growth while simultaneously cleaning up our balance sheet and capitalization structure and bringing our reporting and audit requirements current in preparation for application to list on a more senior exchange.”
Additional information will be provided to shareholders periodically through upcoming press releases and continually at the Company’s Facebook page and corporate website:
www.facebook.com/INIWorldwide/
http://www.ini-worldwide.com
For additional information, please contact the Company’s Investor Relations Firm at:
[email protected]
www.valuecorptrading.com
Alfred Tennyson wrote:We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
Deception and fraud
There are deceptive companies that are marketing "insulating paint" for many applications who are engaged in a scam, and several such companies have been forced to cease their marketing practices after receiving warning letters from the Federal Trade Commission.[1] These companies are merely riding the coat tails of legitimate companies engaged in the ceramic and coatings industries and are more marketing than substance. They incorporate materials such as glass spheres or fly ash into low quality paints. Scammers have been selling “insulating” paint to gullible consumers for at least 27 years. Two companies that offer insulating paint are Super Therm and Nansulate. The CCHRC (Cold Climate Housing Research Center) researchers concluded that “there was no discernible difference in the performance of the Super Therm or Nansulate in comparison to regular latex paint during the energy monitoring tests.” [2], and they also said “Such products have the primary goal of reducing solar absorption to decrease air conditioning loads. Such considerations were not included in our tests, as they are not considered of primary importance for Alaska’s climate.”
.......
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insulativ ... _and_fraud
Alfred Tennyson wrote:We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
Tanada wrote:As your citation points out the product is designed for warm climates so saying it failed Alaskan cold climate tests is hardly indicative of fraud.
I have no dog in the fight, but I try and judge things by the facts. The fact that the product is still for sale a decade after it was first introduced tends to indicate that it is popular if not totally effective under all conditions.
The same as ordinary paint
Every researcher who has examined these products has concluded that there is no such thing as insulating paint. For example, tests at the Florida Solar Energy Center confirm that these paints are nothing special: “The Florida Solar Energy Center has tested ceramic paints and found them to have no significant advantage over ordinary paint in terms of their ability to retard heat gains through exterior building surfaces.”
Every few years, the sleepy regulators at the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) wake up long enough to send warning letters to the most egregious paint scammers. For example, in 2002 the FTC clamped down on Kryton Coatings International, a manufacturer which claimed that its paint was equivalent to 7 in. of fiberglass insulation. In March 2009, the FTC took action against Sumpolec, a marketer of coatings that were said to “equal R-100 insulating value.”
To find them, just lift a few rocks
In spite of these rare actions, however, marketers of “insulating” paint continue to thrive. With a simple Google search, any Web surfer can conjure up dozens of distributors of insulating paint, including those hawking Nansulate and Super Therm.
GHung wrote:Deception and fraud They incorporate materials such as glass spheres or fly ash into low quality paints. Scammers have been selling “insulating” paint to gullible consumers for at least 27 years. Two companies that offer insulating paint are Super Therm and Nansulate.
.......
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insulativ ... _and_fraud
GHung wrote:Why so much success? There's a sucker born every minute?
But like Tanada says, if this is just a fraud, then why so much success, and so many huge companies as customers? Are such companies all easily duped over time? Companies care about money.
then why so much success?
Maybe I owe rockdoc an apology. Some scammers and nutters get on my nerves, too, just different kinds. Even though I'm ten years late to the party...
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