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 When the old dog is
Great Dane, one of Americas trucking icons, the curriculum better be well prepared.
Great Dane, pioneer in custom trailer design, merged with Pines Trailer, high volume fleet
supplier,
to create Great Dane Limited Partnership, one of the worlds largest trailer
companies.
The match combines two former competitors into a synergistic unit that shares design and
engineering,
uses what one does better to improve the other, and expands manufacturing locations to
benefit the customer.
Successful operations individually a production powerhouse as a unit. In truth, two
companies made for each other.
We visited Great Danes division office and plant in Savannah, Georgia, where custom
trailer making began in 1930. What we learned is that Great Dane continues to be
head of its class. |
How is the merger with Pines Trailer working out?
Skip Skipper, senior vice presidentsales and marketing: Extremely
well. Great Dane was purchased by CC Industries in Chicago, the company that owned Pines
Trailer. Now, were one company Great Dane Limited Partnership.
Great Dane has been a specialized manufacturer of custom
designed trailers, and Pines was a large-customer, large-quantity manufacturer. Through
our distribution system, we will now have available products that appeal to both
markets.
How will expanded manufacturing
facilities benefit both divisions?
Mike Thomas, senior vice president manufacturing: We now have a
larger company with more depth, more purchasing power, and manufacturing expertise coming
from two different backgrounds. Each learns from the other.
The Great Dane philosophy was customization, high end,
value added. The Pines philosophy was high volume and low cost.
We now have eight plants, not all doing the same thing.
Five plants build dry freights, while Wayne, Nebraska has only one product, the Super Seal
refrigerated trailer. Our Terre Haute facility is geared toward producing fleet business.
It has such a high capacity, it could be one of the top ten trailer manufacturers. They
build a simple product that fleets like and buy a thousand at a time. Its a
basic, strong, durable trailer thats a good value.
Now with Pines philosophy of building for fleets, we
can use their experience and knowledge, combined with what we already know, to make us
better at what were doing.
How have Great Dane workers become so
adept at building custom trailers?
Thomas: Building custom trailers is like building custom homes. If
you want a custom home, an architect can draw a set of plans. But he wont give you
detail on every single nail, how to trim every 2x4, or cut every bevel.
Hell design a basic profile of the trim and rely on
the carpenter to produce it. You rely on the tradesmans skill level to
interpret the basic blueprint. And build the end product. Thats what we do here.
We dont provide finite details to build a trailer, or
the shop would load up with paper. They have to know how to build it. We provide the
minimum amount of information required for the product. Thats a problem in some
places, because you cant hire cabinetmakers right off the street. It takes time and
training to get there.
How does this fit in with your motto,
Built Better To Last Longer?
Charles Henry, director of advertising and industry relations: A
big problem with mass-produced products is defects. Its little things that drive you
nuts. Often, its more trouble to get the little stuff fixed than the big stuff.
No one stands behind trailers like Great Dane. Our people
take responsibility. Each worker knows the job they do is important to the customer, so
its important to them. Its everyones job to deliver value.
You cannot inspect quality into a product. You can find
defects, but you cannot inspect quality into a product. And, quality is key to a long,
useful life.That sounds like W.
Edwards Deming. Does Great Dane follow Demings quality principles?
Henry: Yes and no. Were not trying to follow Deming so much,
were just trying to get it right
the first time. Theres a lot
of pride of workmanship. |
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Mike
Thomas
Senior Vice President Manufacturing |
Charles
Henry
Director of Advertising and Industry Relations |
H.T.
(Skip) Skipper III,
Senior Vice President of
Sales and Marketing |
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Has the merger affected morale?
Skipper: Our morale is very high. We are pleased with the direction
our company has taken, and we couldnt be happier with our new partners. Theyve
given us the resources we need to grow, and thats what we intend
to do. Of course, our business is very good. We have increased production to give our
customers improved delivery and make them more competitive.
As you know, quality has always been a part of the Great
Dane mystique. Were proud to be considered the industrys premier quality
manufacturer. Thats very important to us and a reputation that we will always
protect. When you try to mix maximum production with a high level of quality, those two
things dont always work together. However, were doing a fine job of keeping
product quality high while building more product.
What can be specified on a trailer?
Henry: Every application for a trailer will be totally different. A
trailer might look like a box on wheels, but you cant always buy a used trailer made
for one thing and use it for something else.
Its the same thing with Bridgestone tires. You have
everything from different tread designs to wear characteristics and where the ribs and
cavities are. Its not just a trailer is a trailer is a trailer.
Jim Hofstetter, vice president, engineering: Outside, trailers may
look identical, but they have different ratings and capabilities. Much of what we do is
custom-designed manufacturing. Speced on everything from tires to axles to brakes to
brake control systems, suspensions, colors, side walls, thickness of trailer, inside
lining, length, height, width and type of floor. Of the 35,000 trailers we build a year,
only 2,000 are stock. Great Dane asks what you want. Then we build it for you.
Is Great Dane a turnkey operation?
Henry: Very definitely. For instance, we probably install more
cooling units on refrigerated trailers than anybody in America. Thermo-King and Carrier
dealers dont install as many units as we do. You can order a reefer trailer, pick it
up in Savannah, Georgia, Wayne, Nebraska or Brazil, Indiana and it will already have the
customers logos and colors, and a cooling unit. You can immediately pick up a
refrigerated load and go. With other manufacturers, you may have to arrange individual
purchases and installations for each item. We deliver ready for the road. Thats more
value added for our customers.
How does Great Dane balance price and
value?
Henry: Weve never wanted to be the largest trailer
manufacturer, weve wanted to be the best. Were here to serve our customers.
Without customer satisfaction, theres nothing.
You can sell a customer once on price, but youll never get a repeat order,
unless the quality of the product and the way the customer is treated after the sale is
fine tuned.
Great Dane is not in the trailer business, were in the satisfaction business.
If we dont help people with their problems, then someone else will. |
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| Torture
TESTS Prepare Trailers for the REAL World When a Great Dane trailer leaves the production line, it has been
professionally speced, specially designed and built to precision.
But, how tough is it? To find out, we visited Great Danes
Research and Development Lab. There, a series of torture tests put Great Dane trailers
through exaggerated but real world situations to determine if the trailer is
qualified to carry the Great Dane name.
Fork Lifts Cross Every type of floor 10,000
Times
Flooring inside Great Dane trailers is tested for wear by a scaled down, fully loaded fork
lift. The truck travels 10,000 times, back and forth, over each type of flooring Great
Danes and competitors. If there is anything wrong with the material, Great
Dane wants to know it first.
Shower Survival Test for Leaks
Every trailer is washed before it leaves the assembly line, then washed hard with
someone inside the trailer looking for leaks.
Desert Heat Inside Battles Air Conditioning
Outside
To measure the heating and cooling efficiencies of its trailers, Great Dane operates one
of only a few thermal testing facilities in America. Electric heaters are placed inside
the trailer, while the outside is cooled by heavy-duty air conditioners. Once inside and
outside temperatures have stabilized, the insulation R-factor of the trailer can be
calculated by measuring the amount of electricity necessary to keep the inside temperature
constant. |
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Dan McCormack,
testing manger of Great Danes Research and Development Lab, readies the
computer-controlled road simulator. McCormack stands beside one of six hydraulic cylinders
resting on a 12-foot thick concrete foundation. |
Jim
Hofstetter
Vice President Engineering |
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Finally, The Road Trip From Hell
Imagine being able to subject 65,000 pounds of trailer and cargo to 10 years of stress
in just 75 hours. Great Dane does it frequently.
A computer-controlled road simulator is the best single tool
Great Dane has for product evaluation. It brings the road into the lab, from interstates
to heavy-vehicle proving grounds.
To create the simulation, engineers rig a trailer with strain
gauges that actually record bumps and jolts onto magnetic tape. The trailer is driven over
a section of road such as the interstate between Savannah and Atlanta then the tape
is played back and edited to leave only the roughest parts of the road.
This is typical of the tapes played through a computer that
recreates grade crossings, pot holes and expansion joints driven at highway speeds
compressing them into the 75 hours of torture given to Great Dane trailers.
These computer-generated impulses drive six hydraulic cylinders
which subject trailers to a variety of bouncing, flexing and shaking. The cylinders, with
a total load capacity of 200,000 pounds, driven by four 125-hp motors, pumping 1,000
gallons of fluid at 3,000 psi, stress the trailers far beyond any real-life situations.
Thats just for road simulations, said
McCormack. During durability testing, we virtually beat the stuffing out of the
trailer for 75 hours.
In fact, the road simulator has the power to take the
trailer, and the 50,000 pounds of concrete inside, and send it skyward to the roof
fortunately, this has never happened. |
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