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Microcap & Penny Stocks : IECS- NASDAQ $0.50 stock won prestigious OIL and Gas... -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TrainDriver who wrote (193)2/19/1998 4:37:00 AM
From: john b  Respond to of 747
 
TrainDriver:

Maybe a call to the company would have been a better place to start, you know requesting an investment packet. You are looking for "specifics" and "revenue" information after you have purchased stock?

Been there before and trying to break myself of the habit.

Regards and good luck

JB



To: TrainDriver who wrote (193)2/19/1998 7:51:00 AM
From: JOHN SAMSEL  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 747
 
TrainDriver,

Welcome to the thread and IECS. And to the search for information on IECS.

IECS uses bioconversion of food waste and bioremediation of soil contaminated with oil products. In short it uses bacteria not fire to do the work for it. It is cleaner and leaves a richer by-product due to millions of little dead bacteria that give up their lives to clean up after us. IECS claims to have the best bioremediation of soil. About its bioconversion of food products you can find a lot of information on the process in the Trooper home page, ( www.trooper.com ) or the Thermo Tech page ( www.ttrif.com. ).

The engineering solution may not be the same for IECS but the little critters are there all the same. IECS may be positioning itself to compete strongly in the agri-business side of bioconversion. Training franchisees on how to use the technology, getting cattle and hog farmers to buy into the process and also running a few hog farms. IECS needs a niche to compete. I am guessing it is moving in this direction.

Regards

John



To: TrainDriver who wrote (193)2/19/1998 8:56:00 PM
From: BILL HOJNACKI  Respond to of 747
 
Train Driver,

For a description of what the company does, read my post #119.
Training is required to teach potential owner/operators in how to liquid feed the livestock. It is a highly automated and complicated business.

I believe that 70% of the cost of raising a hog is in feed. If the feed cost is free, and your getting paid to receive it at about $40 a ton, you can see the potential here.

Bill H.