Enock Aloo

Controls Engineer at Lantech

Enock Aloo is an accomplished Application Engineer at Lantech since January 2016, with extensive expertise in programming PLCs, customizing HMIs, and automation controls. Previously, Enock held positions as a Project Engineer at Trane Co., where responsibilities included investigating control solutions and leading initiatives for New Product Development, and as a Controls Engineer at Ingersoll Rand - Trane, focusing on troubleshooting support and developing testing methods for control systems. Enock's early career includes serving as a Maintenance Supervisor at British American Tobacco, managing maintenance for production machines and electrical panels. Educationally, Enock holds a Bachelor of Science in Electrical and Electronics Engineering from the University of Kentucky and an Associate of Science in Engineering from Bluegrass Community and Technical College, alongside a diploma in Electrical/Electronics from The Kenya Polytechnic.

Location

Louisville, United States

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Lantech

Founded in 1972, at the peak of an energy crisis, Lantech made an impact on the world by inventing stretch wrapping and sparking a packaging revolution that spread around the globe and changed the way pallets of products are unitized for shipment. Now, billions of pallet loads are stretch wrapped every year. Our passion to do things better, faster, safer and at lower costs led to a culture of innovation and generated 277 patented inventions to date that create enormous value for our customers by eliminating waste from their supply chains. Today, we build case handling machines in the Netherlands and stretch wrapping machines in the United States. We have sales and technical support offices in North America, Europe, Australia, and China as well as a global network of independent distributors, integrators and service technicians. Where our customers are, we are. Our revolutionary fervor is unchanged. Our mission is simple: to reduce or eliminate the huge amount of shipping damage that occurs as products make their way from their point of manufacture to their destination.


Employees

201-500

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