Sirius_Corona
8 months ago
It saddens me greatly to see so many investors and traders alike hurt by a company most in 2008-2009, including myself, considered a "safe" penny investment; that rare company with quality assets, sound management and a great base of hold and accumulate "longs". I was one of those longs too. However, another penny stock I was in at the time taught me a valuable lesson, that there is no such thing as a safe investment in the penny market; to always take profit! Therefore, when opportunity presented itself during the National Instrument craze well over a decade ago, I did what was against my better judgement and closed my SRSR position between .13-.18 cents. With the profit, I left the penny market entirely in 2009 and invested the money in the big caps.
I periodically check on the SRSR board hoping to find Longs in the green again, Management finally realizing value for its shareholders; some who have loyally held for over 15 years! Many have been hurt by blindly trusting the Company, it's Management and the vast potential of its assets. It is clear now, what was not so clear back in 2008, that a last name like Keevil is not worth much if the intent is not to seek shareholder value or realize the business plan long-term.
My heart goes out to those of you who lost retirements, family money; funds you couldn't afford to lose. A very hard lesson indeed. At .0001, it is hard to find positives here, but I'll finish by saying that SRSR once rose from the ashes of the triple zeros to climax at .21 cents, and anything is possible in this crazy world of pennies.
JMoneyHoops
11 months ago
Share structure change is this coming back?
?? $SRSR
??0.0001
Expert Market, AS: 950M, OS: 949M, US: 888M
Restricted Shares Updated:
?? 33,003,765 (2023-01-16)
?? 61,027,098 (2023-06-08)
Difference: +84.9% (+28M)
Unrestricted Shares Updated:
?? 916,730,787 (2023-01-16)
?? 888,707,454 (2023-06-08)
Difference: -3.1% (-28M)
Chart, OTC Profile, Twitter, @otcupdates
Update: 2023-06-08 22:31:43 (UTC)
aredrooster
1 year ago
I have been away so I didn't see your last message. You have a very good handle on the schemes that went on here as well as the business that our former scammers are now pursuing. If you follow the progression of scams MGGV, SRSR, CANADIAN CANNIBUS, WAYLAND GROUP, JOSHUA GOLD and there may be more of which I am not aware. Several of the principals were the same or intertwined. By the way Web, as you know Lorne has passed and Suv was born. lol
TB
2 years ago
President Penny Currah 3048 SENECA DRIVE, OAKVILLE, ONTARIO, L6L1A9, CAN 09/13/2022 Active
Secretary Dino Micacchi 92 oakridge ave, Innerkip, MT, N0J 1M0, CAN 09/13/2022 Active
Treasurer Dino Micacchi 92 oakridge ave, Innerkip, MT, N0J 1M0, CAN 09/13/2022 Active
Director PENNY CURRAH 3048 SENECA DRIVE, OAKVILLE, ONTARIO, L6L1A9, CAN 09/13/2022 Active
Director Dino Micacchi 92 oakridge ave, Innerkip, MT, N0J 1M0, CAN 09/13/2022 Active
https://esos.nv.gov/EntitySearch/BusinessInformation
supermegadope
2 years ago
If there was only some niobium around
___________________________________________________
A Cambridge University professorโs ultrafast EV battery startup has raised $59 million in Series B funding. Nyobolt aims to develop a battery that can achieve 5-minute EV charging time.
EV charging in 5 minutes
Goslar, Germany-based H.C. Starck Tungsten Powders (HSC), a wholly owned subsidiary of Hanoi-headquartered Masan High-Tech Materials, the largest manufacturer of mid-stream tungsten products outside of China, led the funding for Cambridge, UK-based Nyobolt.
H.C. Starck will help Nyobolt scale up its R&D and manufacturing centers in the UK and US, as well as its battery recycling program.
Nyoboltโs executives say itโs currently focusing on developing batteries for high-performance racing EVs, and that its batteries could be ready for use in mass-market EV models later this decade, according to Reuters.
Hady Seyeda, CEO of H.C. Starck Tungsten Powders, said:
Nyoboltโs technology is a real breakthrough that we can help commercialize based on our vast experience in transferring innovative solutions into large-scale manufacturing. This partnership is also going to accelerate the development toward a circular economy for batteries via enhanced recycling and new models of use.
The Telegraph explains how Nyobolt is using niobium and tungsten, both stable metals often used to strengthen steel or create steel alloys, to develop battery anodes:
The startup uses battery research developed by Cambridge University scientist Dame Prof Clare Philomena Grey. Nyoboltโs battery anodes use niobium, a gray, crystalline metal, and tungsten, which charge batteries more rapidly.
The company said its technology allowed batteries to be charged to 90% capacity in less than five minutes, while improving power and durability tenfold.
Dame Grey said:
We are excited to move our technologies from development to deployment in the market. We founded Nyobolt following the discovery of new anode technologies containing tungsten with remarkable fast-charging capability to bring these properties to the market in applications touching all aspects of daily life. The funding from H.C. Starck will help Nyobolt to scale up our operations in the UK and the United States and bring a more sustainable solution into the energy storage industry.
Electrekโs Take
There are startups all over the world working on improving EV battery performance, and the EV industry needs all that brain power. But Nyobolt is definitely one to watch.
Iโd be curious to know how difficult it will be to scale up this type of battery. Niobium is more plentiful than lead and less abundant than copper, an abundant metal that might see a potential future shortfall, but tungsten is classified as a rare metal. How will their supply of those metals affect this companyโs ability to scale?
H.C. Starck Tungsten Powders has access to the worldโs largest tungsten reserves outside of China, so its investment in Nyobolt makes sense.