Stop Leaving Diesel Gallons at the Island.
Can physical upgrades to your commercial lane configuration fundamentally shift your station’s throughput? To find out, we conducted a rigorous 12-month transaction audit across our installation network.
By isolating pay-at-the-pump transactions over a consecutive 12-month window (6 months pre-installation vs. 6 months post-installation), we stripped away unrelated indoor kiosk prepays or bulk fleet contract shifts. We isolated the raw, unpolluted impact of our units.
The scope of the performance study speaks for itself:
Total Footprint Audited: 39 Commercial Fueling Locations
Total Volume Tracked: Over 19,000,000 Gallons of diesel transactions analyzed
Proven Reliability: Half of all multi-site pilot locations realized an immediate positive volume trajectory within the first 180 days of commissioning.
Bracket A: High-Volume Freight Hubs (400,000+ Gallon Baseline)
The Operational Ceiling: High-throughput sites hit a hard revenue floor due to transaction friction and island bottlenecks during peak freight hours. Drivers keep moving if they see lines.
The Solution: High-speed dispensing hardware and streamlined pay-at-the-pump processing pull trucks through the lane faster, cutting total wait times per truck.
The Volumetric Impact: +16.52% Volume Lift. High-volume sites in this bracket captured over 71,000 incremental gallons in just 6 months post-installation.
Bracket B: Regional Fuel Stops & Proportional Growth MVPs (200,000 – 350,000 Gallon Baseline)
The Operational Ceiling: Regional stops must fight aggressively for fleet driver loyalty against massive national competitors across the street. Speed-to-fill convenience is the number one deciding factor for a driver.
The Solution: Delivering an effortless, lightning-fast commercial fueling experience that mirrors national plaza speeds on a tighter footprint.
The Volumetric Impact: Up to +32.38% Throughput Acceleration. Mid-tier locations realized the highest proportional growth, injecting an additional 25,000 to 81,000 net new gallons into their system in the first half-year.

