
22 Radios With a Job.
This Shah Alam industrial order is useful because the invoice shows the actual radio plan: 13 units for production, 4 for warehouse and 5 for EHS, all on Swiftcom SC-F1 PMR446 License Free radios.
What changed after Octogen fixed it
- Problem
- A Shah Alam factory or warehouse cannot plan walkie talkies from headcount alone; production, warehouse and EHS need different radio ownership, charging habits and call priorities.
- Result
- Bukku invoice INV-202506-032 records 22 Swiftcom SC-F1 PMR446 License Free (SIRIM) radios at RM400 per unit, with department split: Production 13, Warehouse 4 and EHS 5.
- Verification
- Verified from current Bukku invoice detail scan on 15 June 2026; invoice amount RM8,800, balance RM0 and no real customer name, full address or serial numbers used in public copy.

A useful Shah Alam radio story has to help each industrial buyer make a better decision.
“If the line stops, I need one short call to reach the right person immediately.”
Production received 13 of the 22 radios in the invoice note, so the story starts with the team that carries the highest daily coordination load. For a factory buyer, this is the first sizing lesson: production usually needs more units than management because the radios sit close to line movement, changeover, quality checks and supervisor calls.
“A warehouse delay is often just a missing status update between receiving, staging and production.”
Warehouse received 4 radios in the department split. That is enough to teach the planning pattern: one voice path for receiving, staging, dispatch or material handover can reduce walking time and phone chasing when production is waiting for parts or finished goods movement.
“Safety calls need priority language and a direct channel into the teams moving people and material.”
EHS received 5 radios, which makes the case study stronger than a generic product page. A safety team does not only need devices; it needs clear call phrases, charging discipline and direct reach into production and warehouse when movement must pause.
“The best quote request tells us the department split, site layout and radio use case before asking for a price.”
For procurement, the proof is concrete: Swiftcom SC-F1 PMR446 License Free radios, 22 units, RM400 per unit, RM8,800 total and RM0 balance. This gives another Shah Alam or Selangor industrial buyer a real reference point without pretending one invoice can predict every site.
Why this Shah Alam industrial radio order is more useful than a location page
The factory problem was not a missing gadget. It was a missing voice map.
A factory floor has different communication speeds. Production needs immediate calls around line status, warehouse needs material movement updates, and EHS needs priority language when safety control matters. The invoice tells the useful story because it records a department split instead of only a product name.
- Production received 13 units because daily floor coordination usually carries the heaviest voice load
- Warehouse received 4 units for receiving, staging, dispatch or material movement roles
- EHS received 5 units so safety checks and stop-work calls are not dependent on phone messages
The strongest buyer lesson is the 13 / 4 / 5 allocation
Many factory and warehouse radio pages say “we cover Shah Alam” but do not help the buyer decide quantity. This invoice does the opposite: it shows how one industrial customer split 22 radios across production, warehouse and EHS.
- Use department responsibility as the first sizing method before adding spare units
- Give each department a radio owner so devices do not disappear between shifts
- Decide whether production, warehouse and EHS share one channel or use separate call discipline
The proof makes the page useful beyond a generic product page
The public proof card keeps the buyer-useful facts visible: invoice number, date, model, quantity, department split, unit price, total and balance. That creates first-hand information without exposing private customer details.
- INV-202506-032, dated 26 June 2025
- 22 x Swiftcom SC-F1 PMR446 License Free (SIRIM)
- Production 13, Warehouse 4, EHS 5; RM8,800 total; balance RM0
The page should not try to win search by repeating Shah Alam. The useful angle is that a real industrial buyer split radios by working department: production, warehouse and EHS. That turns the case study into a decision aid for other factories, warehouses and safety teams in Selangor.
4 practical decisions behind the 22-radio fleet
This case study now works as a Shah Alam factory radio planning example, not a generic local landing page. It uses one paid Bukku invoice, then translates the proof into buyer decisions. Click each step to explore.

How another Shah Alam factory can use this story to plan radios
This is a buyer planning model based on the verified department split, not a claim about live on-site performance. It shows what to prepare before asking Octogen for a factory or warehouse radio quote.
Swiftcom SC-F1 x22 – Production 13 – Warehouse 4 – EHS 5 – RM8,800 paid invoice
How to turn this invoice into a factory radio checklist
Map departments before quantity
- ProductionStart with the department that needs the most daily calls.
- WarehouseAdd radios for receiving, staging, dispatch and material movement.
- EHSReserve radios for safety checks, floor walks and urgent stop-work calls.
- SpareDecide if backup units are needed for charging or shift rotation.
Check whether license-free is enough
- LayoutCheck walls, distance, mezzanine levels, basement areas and outdoor yards.
- NoiseConfirm whether earpieces, speaker mics or headsets are needed.
- ChannelsDecide whether production, warehouse and EHS need separate channel discipline.
- TestAsk for a coverage check when the site is large or complex.
Use the proof responsibly
- InvoiceINV-202506-032 records model, quantity, amount and balance.
- SplitThe department note records Production 13, Warehouse 4 and EHS 5.
- PrivacyFull customer identity, address and serial numbers stay out of public copy.
Facts a factory buyer can use

The facts that help buyers plan a radio fleet
The useful story is not that Octogen can write “Shah Alam” on a page. The useful story is that a real industrial customer split 22 Swiftcom SC-F1 radios across production, warehouse and EHS. That gives another factory buyer a starting point for radio quantity, department ownership, charging routine and whether PMR446 license-free radios are enough.
Shah Alam factory radio questions this case study can answer

Turn your floor map into a radio count
Send Octogen your department split, site layout, shift pattern and working distance. We will help decide whether Swiftcom SC-F1, rental analog radios, PoC radios or a licensed higher-power setup fits the job.















