Industry Conductor for Energy Transmission

Data and energy transmission provider Conductix-Wampfler serves all parts of the warehouse and logistics sector and a great deal more besides. Paul Hamblin catches up with the company’s long-serving industry specialist, Simon Dülffer.

If you want to take the temperature of the industry at any given time, you have to account for understandable subjectivity, an emphasis on different sectors according to core expertise. A forklift manufacturer will face another set of challenges to, say, a sorter supplier or a routing software start-up. Reasonably enough, their perspective of wider industry health is likely to be influenced by their experiences.

Not so for Conductix-Wampfler. The German world leader in data and energy transmission can claim an enviably neutral position, as the spectrum of its activities is so broad. Crane, conveyor, conductor rail, AMR, AGV, take your pick: Conductix-Wampfler’s skill is in applying power to and data to moving systems. “We try to be product neutral at all times,” says Simon Dülffer, Global Market Director, Industrial Automation. “It’s about safe, effective data and power transmission in many applications and we are the biggest company in the world in this niche.” Broad is the right word – clients include some of the world’s most famous theme parks, as well as the more prosaic movers of goods in warehouses.

There are two main tranches to the business. First, the legacy electro-mechanical applications that made Conductix-Wampfler so successful. He explains: “This means conductor rails, cable reels in many sizes, everything from a small reel you use in your garden workshop to megawatt-thick cable with winding lengths of over 1km for use in open pit mining.”

Second, the mechatronic, electronic and software-driven solutions that constitute the company’s portfolio for today’s automated applications. That means control systems for conveyor lines, inductive systems, energy storage, plus the batteries for those systems. “You could call this the growth portfolio,” says Dülffer. “The key for customers is to use different products that are designed to work together in a bundle. An example might be a conductor rail system, you might then add a data transmission system based on a slotted waveguide, perhaps combined with control system for electric monorail. Another example would be for an AGV, comprising a charging solution, battery and data comms package. It is much easier for the manufacturer to build their product with combined expertise from a single source.”

Flexibility v. Throughput

He cites the principal current challenges faced by his customers as the drive for more flexibility and scalability. “We live in uncertain times,” he points out. “It’s therefore hard for customers to map precisely for the five to 10 years that automation planning generally demands. Think of a shuttle system, for instance – it used to be about a drive for better performance, for more throughput, but the emphasis has altered as companies seek more flexibility. So alternatives are now on the market, offering something resembling a blend between AMR and shuttle, so that you are still navigating and storing via a rack, but with the adaptability to scale for the future as required.”

What does that mean for Conductix-Wampfler? “It requires us to offer different kinds of solutions. With throughput as a priority, you’re going for a conductor rail with power provided just-in-time and you don’t carry the weight of energy storage on board the vehicle. For a flexible scalable system you need the flexibility that energy storage gives you, and that brings new challenges for our mechatronic portfolio for AGVs and AMRs. We have to establish how to get the power on board: via charging, energy storage – batteries – and also data transmission requirements, usually including Wi-Fi 6 and fleet safety. On a forklift, you have plenty of space, you can carry weight such as a large battery. You have the driver/operator to help plug and unplug.

“AMRs, on the other hand, present different challenges – you have no driver to plug or unplug, and you must manage considerable weight and space constraints. Hence we offer opportunity charging, delivered via charging stations. Then we examine power – you save costs via operating the battery in a comfort zone, so that it never depletes by running to zero; or you can deploy photovoltaic power, perhaps from the roof. In all circumstances, we can customize to suit customer preference.”

Taking the Industry Temperature

Let’s return to Conductix-Wampfler’s neutral standpoint. How does Simon Dülffer view the state of the sector, particularly after insightful trips to LogiMAT and across the Atlantic to ProMat a week later?

“The geopolitical situation is certainly fostering the current mood of uncertainty,” he reflects. “But logistics remains a long-term market, it’s a tech market, people are still looking for opportunities to innovate. At the end of the day, it’s about technology, not geopolitics, and as long as there’s a business case, products will find their market. The tariff issues have not so far shown us concrete effects in the intralogistics field – it’s a different story in the field of people transportation systems, for instance. In a scenario where a supply chain may have to be re-routed due to tariffs, this is quite easily done if you are dealing with commodities, but with highly engineered products it’s much more difficult.”

Have customer requirements and challenges in the intralogistics sector changed in recent years? “We saw the enormous boom in small loads and parcel sortation systems rocket-boosted by Covid, but with the return of the regular economy over the past 2-3 years, as consumers re-allocated resources – on the holidays they had been missing, for instance – we saw a cyclical shift back to heavier loads, to pallet handling, and those companies have done well for past two years or so. Now it’s possible we may be seeing an upturn once again in the ecommerce sector,” he suggests.

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LFS WMS Optimizes Logistics Operations

Schlüter-Systems KG, a the global supplier of system solutions for tile and natural stone installation, needed seamless, fast, scalable logistics across its 35,000 m² facility. From its headquarters in Iserlohn, Germany, the company supplies wholesalers, construction sites, and tile warehouses around the world. As the former craftsman business has grown into a globally operating enterprise, the demands on its logistics and warehouse management have increased significantly.

In response, Schlüter-Systems has accelerated the digitalization of its warehouse operations across the group and built a new central warehouse at its headquarters. At the heart of this transformation is the LFS warehouse management system from EPG (Ehrhardt Partner Group), which ensures the coordination of all logistics processes. The result: noticeably improved efficiency, maximum flexibility, and a significantly lower error rate.

Schlüter-Systems offers a wide range of products, including various types of Schlüter profiles, electric and hydronic radiant heating systems, drainage solutions, and much more. With a portfolio of over 12,000 items, the company has successfully expanded into new markets and continuously enhanced its logistics capabilities. At its new warehouse in Iserlohn, Schlüter-Systems stocks approximately 12,000 products across 35,000 square meters and two levels.

From Driverless Transport Systems to Overhead Monorails

Fast shipping requires fast logistics — and a high-performance warehouse management system. As the previous WMS and ERP systems could no longer meet the demands of the new warehouse, Schlüter-Systems decided it was time for a change. After a thorough and lengthy selection process, the company chose the LFS warehouse management system.

“In our new central warehouse, we’ve implemented a very high level of automation — with three automated high-bay storage systems, a driverless transport system, an automated small-parts warehouse, and a self-driving overhead monorail,” says Florian Schmidt, Head of Logistics at Schlüter-Systems. “The main challenge was getting the WMS to seamlessly connect all these systems and coordinate the material flow without disruption.”

By implementing LFS, Schlüter-Systems aimed to enhance picking and packing strategies, optimize material flow, and make processes more efficient and transparent. Thanks to close collaboration with the Schlüter-Systems project team, the supply chain specialists at EPG successfully implemented LFS at the site and coordinated all automation solutions within just a few months. “For the suspended monorail system, which can transport various items with a total weight of up to 1.3 tons, there was previously no existing interface,” explains EPG Project Manager Markus Pauly. “We developed a custom connection from the ground up to ensure seamless integration into the system.”

Efficient, Ergonomic, Error-Free

The modular LFS system helps Schlüter-Systems design automation elements at different communication levels and interfaces with shipping service providers in a sustainable and efficient way. “One of the challenges was coordinating the wide variety and complexity of components in day-to-day operations,” says Schmidt.

In addition to the driverless transport system (FTS), the company also uses the cloud-based International Shipping System (ISS), which offers user-friendly features like Track & Trace, interfaces with over 250 shipping carriers, and fully automated shipping label printing.

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Private Jets Transporting Vital Medical Equipment

Think of a private jet and you might imagine celebrities, millionaires and high-flying business owners summoning a first-class flight to transport them to a luxury location. Yet, these planes are also an essential tool in healthcare logistics, helping transport vital equipment around the globe, and often enabling medicine, blood and organs to reach their destination quicker than any commercial aircraft could, writes Vickie Clark, MD of V Jets.

Life and death stakes

Across the world, 85 million units of blood are transfused every year – with many requiring a co-ordinated logistics effort to reach the patient in a timely manner. Individuals in a critical condition need their blood transfusion to begin within just a few hours, to prevent life-threatening complications.

In the case of organ donation, more sensitive organs such as the heart and lungs must be transplanted within four to six hours, otherwise they risk no longer being viable. Even more resilient organs such as the liver and kidneys require transplantation within 12 hours and 24 to 36 hours respectively to maximise the chance of successful surgery (Donor Alliance).

Even where a commercial airline route could feasibly be used to transport the donor organ, there are limitations involved with this choice: for example, in America the organ must arrive at the airport between an hour and two hours before flight departure, and the cargo office at the destination airport must be open when the flight arrives to ensure the organ can be collected by a courier. The organs are also stored within the cargo hold alongside the checked-in baggage of the flight’s passengers, presenting a potential risk when it comes to safe transportation. In fact, the US Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network cites 2.5% of unused organs can’t be donated due to transport issues.

Luxury lifesavers

Why are private jets preferable? Research suggests private jets may be up to five times quicker end-to-end than commercial airlines or land ambulances when it comes to transporting organs, blood donations and other medical equipment.

This is due to a combination of reasons, not least the ability to use smaller airports, more flexible routes, and faster flight speeds. A jet can be ready to go in as little as two hours after a request has been submitted – and can often land at an airport closer to the destination medical centre, or even a field hospital or rural community. This is especially crucial to allow those in remote areas access to the same kind of medical intervention as their urban counterparts, whose medical facilities are generally nearer a large, commercial airport.

If you’re racing against the clock, there is no room for delays – in those situations, private planes aren’t just moving cargo, they’re delivering hope. When it comes to the use of private jets to transport medical supplies, it’s important to remember the reality – that at least one life can be normally be saved but only if the transportation is swift.

There are so many examples of such life-saving missions, like the 7-year-old boy who needed an emergency transfusion after a serious accident in the Caribbean. His rare blood type was not available locally and there were no commercial flights due to land on the island for the next 48 hours – so a private jet delivered the much-needed blood from Miami in less than five hours.

Sometimes, it’s not an isolated incident but a full-scale crisis which requires private planes to be drafted in to support medics on the ground. In Sudan in 2023, commercial airlines suspended services due to the conflict there, but aid organisations were desperate for medical supplies, utilising private jets to ensure they arrived as quickly as possible.

And in West Africa, when there was an Ebola flare-up, a private jet flew in hazmat suits, mobile isolation units and specialised antivirals for WHO doctors. The supplies arrived in ten hours, compared to the three days it would have taken to transport them commercially. When roads are destroyed, airports are shut, and time is running out, a private jet can still make it through, giving hope to those previously battling against seemingly unbeatable odds. This is the side of private aviation that people don’t see – flying stem cells, vaccines, and hearts to patients in need.

Whether due to natural disaster, political unrest, a sudden disease outbreak, or a life hanging in the balance due to illness or accident, time and efficiency is of the essence – and that’s when the private aviation sector proves its about more than just A-listers and corporate giants: it’s capable of saving lives.

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Industrial AI Momentum Showcased

The fifth edition of IFS Connect 2025 drew a record-breaking crowd of more than 500 participants from across Central and Eastern Europe, reinforcing the event’s growing significance as a premier platform for digital innovation in logistics, manufacturing, and enterprise operations, reports Peter MacLeod, Logistics Business Editor.

Held in Warsaw, the conference brought together industry leaders, customers, and technology partners to explore how Industrial AI and cloud-based ERP solutions are transforming business operations in high-impact sectors. At the heart of the event was the unveiling of customer success stories, new product insights, and recognition of standout organisations through IFS’s Business Transformation Awards.

Industrial AI Takes Centre Stage

This year’s IFS Connect focused heavily on Industrial AI, positioning it as the foundation for modern enterprise strategy. The theme resonated with attendees from industries such as logistics, energy, and manufacturing, where automation, predictive analytics, and end-to-end process integration are mission-critical.

“Industrial AI is no longer an option, it is the foundation of modern business,” said Marek Głazowski, President of IFS Poland & Eastern Europe. “It allows companies not just to optimise operations, but to forecast and adapt to future disruptions.”

Cathie Hall, IFS Chief Customer Officer, added: “AI is the biggest shift since the cloud. We’ve invested 20% of our R&D budget into AI over the past year, and demand for IFS.ai is accelerating. Our customers are ready, and so are we.”

Awards Celebrate Digital Leadership

A highlight of the event was the IFS Business Transformation Awards, which honoured companies achieving exceptional progress in digital transformation. Winners included:

• Grupa Kęty: Recognised as a Business Transformation Leader for its successful launch of IFS Cloud in its Extruded Products segment. The ERP rollout covered sales, logistics, finance, warehouse management, and production planning, benefiting over 6,000 employees and integrating with MES, TMS, and other systems.
• Wuteh and ZPAS: Also named in the Business Transformation Leader category for their advances in process optimisation and full-scale IFS Cloud integration, respectively.
• GZ Media (CZ): Honoured as Innovative Business for leveraging IFS Cloud to enhance operational agility in vinyl record production.
• Kilargo: Received the Implementation Excellence award for its smooth system deployment in the food and beverage sector.
• Gamet: Named Reference Client of the Year for its collaborative knowledge-sharing efforts within the IFS ecosystem.
• KAN: Awarded Digital Transformation Architect for leading bold change in the installation systems industry.
• Arkadiusz Szafrański of Mikomax: Named the first-ever IFS Brand Ambassador for championing IFS values and technology adoption.

“These companies exemplify how forward-thinking strategy, combined with modern tools like IFS Cloud, leads to measurable business success,” said Głazowski.

ERP Benchmark

One of the most compelling case studies at IFS Connect was that of Grupa Kęty, a leader in aluminium profiles and components. The company announced the completion of the first phase of its IFS Cloud deployment, aimed at streamlining operations and improving data flow across departments such as production, logistics, and finance.

“This was more than an IT project, it was a company-wide transformation,” said Roch Jasiaczek, IT Director at Grupa Kęty. “The success lies in close collaboration between our teams and IFS, enabling us to customise solutions for real-world industry needs.” “We now have a scalable, flexible platform that supports both current needs and future expansion,” added Rafał Warpechowski, CFO of Grupa Kęty.

As IFS Connect 2025 wrapped up, one message stood clear: Industrial AI and integrated cloud systems are reshaping logistics and manufacturing at scale. From predictive maintenance to real-time process automation, companies embracing digital transformation are gaining the agility needed to stay competitive in a volatile market. With continued investment in AI and strong partnerships across sectors, IFS looks well-placed to play a pivotal role in the digital future of B2B operations.

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High-Speed Sustainable Warehouse Doors

Industrial doors from Efaflex lead the world because they combine premium manufacturing, super high-speed operation and exciting energy-saving opportunities, writes Paul Hamblin, Logistics Business Features Editor.

Efaflex builds and supplies some of the world’s fastest high-speed industrial doors for a wide range of settings – 16 sectors at the most recent count – and you know the German-founded company is confident of that speed because the company familiar logo carries the image of a cheetah, the world’s fastest land animal. That’s confidence.

Such confidence can often be misplaced, of course. The fact that Efaflex delivers on its promises is testament to the long-term global reach and reputation of the company. Even doors with a 10,000mm width can achieve a door leaf speed of 1 m/s. The company says its fastest vertically opening high-speed door is able to achieve top speeds of more than 4 m/s.

Technological and engineering excellence are core to the Efaflex success story. Unique spiral technology enables the door to be both faster and lighter than the competition, while safety is ensured by a myriad range of sensors, all supplied specifically to suit customer needs. “Our consultants can prescribe exactly what you as a customer require,” Head of Marketing Christian Jacob (pictured below) tells me. “There is an individual light and sensor grid inside every door we produce. It will integrate with the manual labour workforce or seamlessly integrate in a Smart warehouse setting incorporating AGVs and AMRs,” he adds.

All doors are manufactured at the company’s plant in the Czech Republic. The latest generation continues to push the boundaries. “It’s about more platform thinking in important areas such as spare parts and the interior of the door,” explains Jacob. “So, even if the shutters vary, each door will have the same framework, which facilitates spare parts efficiency as well as overall maintenance. The beauty is all on the inside, if you like.”

Enabling Customer Sustainability

A central focus of the company’s ethos is to assist in the sustainability efforts of its customers. “We do that by ensuring we provide the door which best saves customer energy consumption,” he reveals. “We start that process directly with the customer, establishing what matters to them so that we can then add to their sustainability story. This is about starting from the customer’s perspective.”

Christian Jacob, Efaflex

Efaflex has introduced EFA-EnergySaver, an easy-to-use tool available to all visitors to its website. Applicable by use case – workshop, production facility or warehouse – in a few clicks you can gain a detailed comparison of potential energy savings via scrutiny of such details as door size and dimensions, door speed, number of doors, opening cycles per day, productive days per year and heating/cooling costs.

All Efaflex doors are high-speed, whether spiral, roll-up or folding, or a clean room or machine protection door. How do customers know which type should be selected, though? “It depends on the hole in the wall and where it is,” he laughs, before elaborating, “You won’t have a fabric door in an outdoor-setting, for instance.”

He won’t reveal how many doors Efaflex installs per year across the globe, other than to quote a figure “in the thousands”. This is fair enough: Efaflex remains a family-owned business and is under no obligation to quote such figures.

Jacob is in broad agreement with the current sentiments around wider market uncertainty, but counters that Efaflex’s order book is “vivid”, adding that sectoral ups and downs are part of business. “We supply 16 different verticals,” he adds. “In these 16, one will always be under pressure; at the moment, automotive is a good example of that, so two current strong points for us, for instance, are in food and in supplying doors for public parking security in urban environments.”

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Slash Downtime by Tackling Recurring Issues in Real-time

Ziegler, a multimodal logistics provider, has taken a major step forward in digitalising and streamlining its warehouse operations through the deployment of DexoryView from Dexory, a leading robotics and data intelligence company. Following a recent implementation, Ziegler has already seen improvements in stock accuracy, process enforcement and operational efficiency at one of its key UK sites that comprises a complex layout and over 55,000 pallet locations.

Faced with the challenge of high stock throughput and a vast storage area, Ziegler realised that it needed to improve the visibility and integrity of its warehouse data. Operating in an industry where even a minor scanning error can have a significant impact, Ziegler wanted to reduce time spent on manual cycle counting, ensure it was able to eliminate stock loss and improve real-time visibility on the state of its key UK warehouse. After exploring options including automated shuttle racking and drone-based solutions, the company turned to DexoryView. The solution combines state-of-the-art robotics technologies and AI-powered digital twin platform to provide real-time intelligence of the health and integrity of the entire warehouse.

“We recognised that even a 1% miss-scan rate could create major issues, from stock rotation delays to customer service impacts,” says Ignas Saknaitis, Divisional General Manager for Logistics at Ziegler. “Our big turning point came after a full stock take took four days and a full weekend of working, with stock anomalies requiring weeks of investigation. With DexoryView, we can now identify and resolve issues in real time before they escalate.”

Real-time data intelligence platform detects inefficiencies and enhances goods movement accuracy

Ziegler has seen a number of benefits in just a month since going live with the solution. It has been able to locate missing pallets, identify mispicks earlier and has been able to address operational pain points such as incorrectly labelled pallets and misplaced inventory, without costly warehouse shutdowns. One of the core benefits of DexoryView has been that Ziegler is now able to pinpoint recurring errors and target root causes of these issues, making the operations more efficient and seamless.

Due to these benefits, Ziegler is seeing a cultural shift in how it approaches inventory control, which the company sees leading to better operational excellence and customer satisfaction.

Slash Downtime

“In busy warehouse environments there is no room for guesswork and outdated data can lead to deliveries being returned and ultimately impact customer satisfaction,” says Oana Jinga, Chief Commercial and Product Officer and Co-Founder at Dexory. “We are working together with Ziegler to replace guesswork with insight and are allowing the business to find root causes to issues that in turn will help their business become more efficient.”

DexoryView Partnership

Ziegler is already looking into the future with DexoryView. It is planning on using the new optimisation functionalities to optimise warehouse layouts based on movement trends. It is also aiming to provide its customers with live access to inventory data for additional peace of mind. There are also plans to expand the rollout of the technology to other Ziegler sites after ROI review from the first deployment.

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Gearmotors for AMR Growth

Bonfiglioli’s tailored drive solutions are at the heart of a smarter, more connected future for manufacturers of AGVs and AMRs, writes Editor Peter MacLeod.

As demand for autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) and automated guided vehicles (AGVs) surges across logistics and warehouse environments, Bonfiglioli, a long-established Italian manufacturer of gear motors and drive systems, is turning its attention to providing customised, compact, and connected solutions for OEMs. Cristiano Cattan, Global Key Account Manager, sat down with us at LogiMAT to discuss the company’s evolution and innovation trajectory.

“We’re seeing significant growth in the AMR space,” Cattan explains. “And what we’ve learned is that this is a very different business from traditional industrial markets. OEMs don’t want off-the-shelf components, they want tailored solutions.”

Bonfiglioli, known historically for industrial gearboxes, continues to expand its offering of integrated systems that combine motors, gear units, and drive controllers. This shift is more than a product evolution, it’s a strategic move to meet customer demands for turnkey solutions and to help them reduce their roster of component suppliers.

“Today, customers are coming to us not for a gearbox, but for a compact, all-in-one drive solution,” says Cattan. “They’re saying, ‘Here’s the performance spec and physical dimensions, can you build something that fits?’ And we’re answering yes, with a collaborative engineering approach between their R&D and ours.”

Valued Partner

This high-touch engagement has made Bonfiglioli a valued partner for OEMs building AMRs and AGVs, especially in space-constrained applications. It’s also pushing the company deeper into electronic integration. The 2023 acquisition of Selcom Group, an Italian electronics manufacturer, has bolstered Bonfiglioli’s in-house capabilities in drive control and edge computing, opening the door to smarter, IoT-enabled systems.

“We now offer solutions that include condition monitoring and predictive maintenance,” says Cattan. “Our gear motors can report live data on temperature, vibration and load. That means operators can identify wear or potential failures before they cause downtime.”

These insights are transmitted either through the customer’s PLC or via Bonfiglioli’s edge computing devices, enabling residual lifetime analysis of components like bearings and motors. “Customers don’t want to stop a line, even for a second,” Cattan (pictured below) adds. “So being able to plan maintenance before failure is a real value-add.”

Cristiano Cattan, Bonfiglioli

Broad Portfolio

Despite these advances, Bonfiglioli’s challenge remains market perception. “We’re still seen by many as just a gearbox supplier,” Cattan says. “But we have a broad portfolio and deep flexibility to go beyond it. We want the industry to know that Bonfiglioli offers full, intelligent drive solutions.”

Indeed, that flexibility has proven crucial, not only in AMRs but also in fixed logistics applications. While Bonfiglioli isn’t embedded in global giants such as Amazon or DHL, Cattan notes a rising interest in their smart conveyor solutions, especially for airport baggage handling and intralogistics systems.

As it evolves its product portfolio, Bonfiglioli is also positioned for a global customer base. “We have production and service locations in Europe, the US, China, and India,” says Cattan. “That global footprint is important for OEMs looking for consistent quality and local support in every major market.”

Looking ahead, Bonfiglioli is preparing to launch a new integrated AGV drive solution later this year. “It’s made entirely in Italy – motor, gear, controller, all in one. That gives us total control over quality and design, and helps our customers reduce their supplier base without compromising performance.”

For Bonfiglioli, the future is compact, smart, and collaborative. And as the AMR and logistics sectors continue to demand speed, flexibility and intelligence, it is really gearing up to meet it.

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