|
March
18, 2003 17:14 ET
Gage
Products Provides Custom Test Fuels and
Service That Automotive Clients Rely On
FERNDALE,
Mich., March 18 /PRNewswire/ -- More than, 115 fuel-pump
prototypes manufactured by Robert Bosch GmbH were doing
their job: running endlessly for thousands of hours.
Lined
up in a garage at Detroit Testing Laboratory Inc., the
slightly differentiated automotive-fuel pumps were operating
continuously day and night. They were running on 13
different, meticulously prepared custom-fuel formulations.
They
ran continuously as the lab conducted durability trials
to give Bosch engineers information about what kind
of pump would last the longest under real-world conditions.
Two
things were crucial to make the test a success. The
first was to have enough of each of the slightly different
fuels on hand when needed without forcing Detroit Testing
Laboratory to become a warehouse for many barrels of
limited-purpose gasoline blends. It was equally important
that every single batch of each fuel type had to be
precisely the same as the one before.
“Our
tests may run up to 2,000, 4,000 or even 10,000 hours,
but you don’t want your test fuel to change over time;
that’s critical,” declares John Saad, supervisor of
Detroit Testing’s fuel-components lab in Centerline,
Michigan. “And it doesn’t.”
Saad
is totally confident in the uniformity of the test-fuel
formulations used by his lab because most of them are
supplied by Gage Products Company, a $45-million firm
headquartered in the Detroit suburb of Ferndale. Gage
Products which has been manufacturing paint-related
products and cleaners for a wide variety of industrial
uses for 67 years, is carving out a growing role in
supplying custom-blended fuels for product development
and for quality and emissions-control testing by automotive
OEMs and their suppliers.
The company currently offers more than 25 different
calibration fluids needed to meet testing requirements
for a variety of automotive products, including oil
and fuel pumps, fuel injectors and transmissions. Its
customers include Visteon, DaimlerChrysler, Ford, Delphi,
TI Automotive, Bosch and Federal Mogul. Gage has provided
these companies and others with more than 1,000 different
blends of gasoline for automotive-test uses over the
last five years.
So
far, custom-blended test fuels have amounted to about
$1-million in annual business for Gage. Gage expects to more than double
its sales of automotive test fuels in the next two years
and says an annual sales goal of $3 million to $5 million
for test fuels is realistic in the next several years.
To
set the stage for this expansion, Gage has re-organized
its refining services group, established a customer
service team, increased laboratory staffing and invested
in new laboratory and fuel-testing equipment. Tom Murray, recently named group
manager of Gage’s Refining Services Division, heads
the company’s test-fuels expansion efforts.
Expanding
the test-fuels business capitalizes on a number of Gage
corporate advantages, including a technically expert
staff and a Detroit-area location that can meet the
increasingly demanding delivery needs of automotive
manufacturers and suppliers. Today, Gage is the auto
industry’s only Michigan-based supplier of custom-blended
gasoline fuels and calibration fluids.
The
company began supplying custom-blended fluids to the
auto industry more than two decades ago. To help automakers
test carburetors that produce the mix of fuel vapor
and air to power an engine, Gage developed calibration
fluids with specific variations of measures such as
viscosity, specific gravity and flow characteristics.
“They are similar to gasoline,” Murray explains, “but
they have a narrow range of properties which helps in
testing because fuel variance won’t be a factor in the
test results.”
Today, fuel-injectors have replaced carburetors in most
vehicles, reducing the demand for calibration fluids.
But there are other needs for custom-blended test fuels
and fluids. Every new engine has demanding certification
requirements. Bulk fuels can’t be used for the precise
analyses that must be made in testing fuel-system components,
where variables such as differences in types, gauges
and shapes of materials and how systems are put together
can result in huge disparities in the performance of
a component or system.
“You
need exact repeatability with your fuel in order to
be sure a test failure is due to component design and
not fuel variance”, Murray explains. “We’re a small custom
refinery, and we blend these fuels to meet exact specifications
that give our customers the required batch-to-batch
repeatability. This unique ability to custom blend fuels
to meet a wide variety of specifications is a core competency
that differentiates Gage from others in this business.
“Crude
oil streams have a great deal of variance depending
on their source. In turn, the gasolines produced from
these crude stocks also have a lot of natural variation
from pump to pump.”
She
adds that “the only way to get repeatability in the
production of these test fuels is to blend individual
components to exact formula requirements.”
Gage
can deliver this type of repeatability because its manufacturing
and refining processes are designed for small batches
that meet extremely tight tolerances.
“Big
oil companies with their massive refining capacity aren’t
interested in supplying small amounts of customized
fuel,” according to Murray. “Custom fuel is not the focus
of their business.”
Other
significant trends in the auto industry also are adding
to the demand for Gage fuels. The mechanics of oil-pump
and brake-system prototypes, for example, must be thoroughly
tested to meet automakers’ increasing demands for production
quality and actual performance improvements. The increasing
market share of plastic fuel tanks and fuel-system components
now calls for a new wave of testing as OEMs carefully
re-evaluate their traditional reliance on metal tanks
and parts.
Globalization
also is adding to demand for test fuels, as OEMs adjust
their hardware for the various qualities and types of
gasolines used around the world. China, for example,
uses relatively unrefined gasoline compared with the
U.S. market, according to Wing. But most of the Big
Three’s development work on engines for international
markets is done in the United States, which creates
demand here for specialized test fuels.
The
major push for cleaner-burning engines also is adding
to Gage’s work, she says. From the very tough upcoming
emissions standards in California and the rising concern
about global warming, there is tremendous pressure on
automakers to improve. There’s more work with gasoline
alternatives such as ethanol and additives such as MTBE
that are intended to make gasoline burn more cleanly.
“The
engine manufacturers are on one side and the oil companies
are on the other side, with the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency in the middle, and they’re all having a big debate
about who’s to blame for tailpipe emissions. But the
bottom line is that everyone has to scramble now and
do whatever they can to improve the situation, and fast”,
Murray adds.
The
growing popularity of a new generation of diesel fuels
and systems, called “clean diesel,” also is creating
demand for Gage’s fuels, particularly in Europe. The
company ships products from its Michigan facilities
and also contracts some manufacturing to companies on
Europe.
Gage
maintains an inventory of more than 250 custom-blended
gasoline fuels for use in automotive test programs.
Custom fuels generally cost an average of $9 to $18
a gallon but can cost as much as $250 per gallon, depending
on the complexity of the blending process. Gage also
provides certification of the fuel recipe so that clients
know exactly what’s contained in the blend.
The
company has found that a major value they add to their
custom-blending business is helping customers in both
independent test labs and OEM engineering departments
understand exactly what fuels are require for their
tests. “We’ve developed a whole library of specifications,”
says Murray. “A lot of people aren’t certain what
they need. Or they may know the fuel’s name, but not
know its specifications.”
Another
key competency for Gage is the ability to deliver quickly,
almost always within five days – and sometimes much
quicker. “The old adage ‘time means money’ really applies
to this business,” Murray notes. “ Once a test-fuel
need is established, our customer wants the fuel as
quickly as possible”. The company’s geographic location
in metro Detroit is a major advantage, compared with
competitors in the oil-and-gas country of Oklahoma and
Texas.
An
unexpected need for four barrels of a custom blend in
early January gave a senior technician at TI Automotive
a renewed appreciation for Gage’s ability to ship products
called Reference Fuel C on an expedited basis. Keith
Roggenbuck says that over the holidays his company ran
out of a particular type of fuel used in testing fuel-system
components.
“We
were in a pickle,” Roggenbuck recalls. “We called Gage
Products on a Friday and had our test fuel four days
later. It’s great to have them close by, because we
often run into time issues when we try to obtain fuels
from Texas.”’
There’s
more to the quality of Gage’s service as well, according
to Roggenbuck. “They really go out of their way to provide
quality service,” he says.
Detroit
Testing Laboratory’s Saad notes that the consistent
quality of Gage’s products has made the company his
A-1 supplier. “We really have to stay on top of things,”
he explains. “Often we have clients who want to come
up with their own blend, and Gage is the best in the
business at helping them – and us – figure out what
we need and then delivering it.”
Like
so many other things in the business world, accountability
is vital for Gage’s clients Saad says, “whenever something
goes wrong in a test, the first thing our customer is
going to check is a certificate of analysis and a sample
of the fuel. When we’re dealing with Gage, we know that
a problem with the blend is the first possibility that
we can cross off our list.”
Source:
Gage Products Company
CONTACT:
Company Contact:Tom Murray of Gage Products Company, Phone: 248-691-6737, Email: tmurray@gageproducts.com
; or Media Contact: Larry Weis of AutoCom Associates, +1-248-647-8621, E-Mail: lweis@usautocom.com
, for Gage Products Company
|