Talk:Rittal
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Some proposed changes
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I just edited this article by delivering a translation of the German article. As an employee of Rittal I sure have a conflict of interest, but I wasn't aware that a translation is seen as such, sorry! It would be nice if someone could have a look at my translation (https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Rittal&oldid=812542531) and if it is okay publish it. Thanks and sorry again, --Manuel Funk (talk) 13:34, 28 November 2017 (UTC)
- The translation is fine. I removed the claim to 11, 000 employees until secondary confirmation. That may be what the company website says, but I'm not entirely sure what metrics they're using to arrive at that number. 11,000 seems excessive. There seems to be much more on the German version.
Is there more text somewhere that you'd like to add to the article?I see now where the proposed text is. Please add it here to the talk page for us to consider. When its ready, change the "answered" response in the request edit template from "yes" to "no" to reactivate your request. Danke schön Spintendo ᔦᔭ 04:06, 6 December 2017 (UTC)
- Just added the the proposed text (see below). Thanks for having a look at it! --Manuel Funk (talk) 08:43, 6 December 2017 (UTC)
Translated Version of German Article
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Rittal, headquartered in Herborn, is a German provider of solutions for industrial enclosures, power distribution, climate control, IT infrastructure, and software and services. Solutions from Rittal are used, among other things, in mechanical and plant engineering, the food industry, IT and telecommunications. Founded in 1961, Rittal is the largest company in the owner-operated Friedhelm Loh Group with a workforce of 9,300 at 13 production facilities and 58 subsidiaries. The German production sites are located in Herborn, Rittershausen, Hof (Westerwald), Burbach and Eschenburg-Wissenbach. The company is certified to ISO 9001 and ISO 14001 and its CEO is Karl-Ulrich Köhler. The name Rittal is derived from the places where the company was founded – Rittershausen in Dietzhölztal. Products The product portfolio includes enclosure, power distribution, climate control, IT infrastructure, and software and service solutions. In collaboration with sister company Eplan, Rittal digitizes customer processes with data that extends from the engineering and production stages all the way through to logistics and commercial processes. At the heart of the digital workflow is the virtual prototype, which interconnects all process steps. The main sectors employing Rittal solutions are as follows:
Locations Rittal is represented by 58 subsidiaries throughout the world. The sales network comprises 150 sales and logistics centres. Production takes place at 13 facilities, including the following:
In 2016, Rittal started constructing one of the world’s most advanced plants for compact enclosures in Haiger. The concept is based on state-of-the-art workflows and production processes – from the customer order all the way through to delivery. Interlinked production at the plant will start in 2018. The Rittal plants in Rittershausen and Hof are also being geared to Industry 4.0 standards, and a further plant is to open in Dietzhölztal-Ewersbach. The company is investing around 250 million euros to restructure its production operations in the region. Awards
Sponsorship Rittal sponsors a number of football and handball clubs in the region, including HSG Wetzlar. Since 1 March 2006, the company has sponsored and lent its name to the Mittelhessen-Arena in Wetzlar, which is now called Rittal Arena Wetzlar. Rittal was also a major sponsor of Hessentag 2016 in Herborn. References
External links Official website |
Rewritten version of German translation
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Rittal is a German company headquartered in Herborn. The company manufactures industrial enclosures for use in industrial settings. Founded in 1961, Rittal is a subsidiary of the Friedhelm Loh Group. The name Rittal is derived from the places where the company was founded – Rittershausen in Dietzhölztal. Products The company's products include enclosures, power distribution (CLARIFY) climate control, IT infrastructure, and software and service solutions for usage in:
Locations Rittal is represented by 58 subsidiaries throughout the world. The sales network comprises 150 sales and logistics centres. Production takes place at 13 facilities, including the following:
In 2016, Rittal constructed a plant in Haiger and a further plant is to open in Dietzhölztal-Ewersbach. The company is investing around 250 million euros to restructure its production operations in the region. Industry recognition
Sponsorships Rittal sponsors a number of football and handball clubs in the region, including HSG Wetzlar. Since 1 March 2006, the company has sponsored and lent its name to the Mittelhessen-Arena in Wetzlar, which is now called Rittal Arena Wetzlar. Rittal was also a major sponsor of Hessentag 2016 in Herborn. References
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Rewritten version issues
Above you'll find my rewrite of your translation. Please note that the headings were removed from both versions, in order to maintain this talk page's heading structure in the table of contents. Although this is a translation of material that is already available on the German Wikipedia, the policies and procedures for conflict of interest editing on the English Wikipedia are stricter in some aspects, while the requirements for references are almost always stricter. Thus, some material available in the German version may not be so in the English version. See Translating German Wikipedia for more information.
- Some issues that arose over this translation:
- It was unclear how Rittal got its name. You wrote that it took letters from a city, but it's unclear from the letters that you wrote, where in the city's name, they came from. Please clarify.
- Please clarify what it is that the company makes; and as a manufacturer, whom do they make it for. For example, under "products" you have food service. Does this mean Rittal makes food? Or does it mean that they provide the staffing to serve food?
- Process industry - this has no equivalent in the English language, except for process servers who are connected to the legal industry.
- What you've titled "Awards" and I've titled "Industry recognition" needs better sourcing. I deleted anything that wasnt cited. Ostensibly that leaves only two awards left, and they both cite Rittal. Unless there are references from some other source, none of the stricken out material will be added.
- What is the significance of the Haiger plant? The explanation describing its purpose is confusing. Unless this can be expounded upon in an understandable way, it will likely be added in only a cursory manner, i.e., "The company opened a new facility in Haiger on such and such date."
Spintendo ᔦᔭ 18:48, 6 December 2017 (UTC)
- Thank you very much for your work and information! I will have a deeper look at it when I have more time. But about your first point I thought this was clear by highlighting the letters by showing them in italics: The name Rittal is derived from the places where the company was founded – Rittershausen in Dietzhölztal. --Manuel Funk (talk) 09:06, 7 December 2017 (UTC)
- I now made some changes to the rewritten version: I found sources to most of the awards, deleted the unclear part about the Haiger plant and added the part about the origin of the name "Rittal" with better highlighting of the letters. Next I will try to clarify the unclear parts about the products. --Manuel Funk (talk) 10:26, 23 January 2018 (UTC)