If you’re comparing iControls PULSE commercial operators for an industrial application, the decision should be made on measurable workload capability, serviceability, and site suitability. Below is a proof-driven comparison using the two GDI platforms most commonly selected for industrial duty, HAML and JDMG.
In industrial service, the operator is not judged by features, it’s judged by uptime. The fastest way to reduce callbacks and downtime is to select a platform sized for daily cycles, environment, and service workflow.
iControls positions PULSE as a direct-drive DC commercial operator family, promoting features like programmable speeds, soft start/stop, and built-in 24V battery backup on certain series.
Reference: iControls PULSE commercial operators
This is the same way industrial customers decide: workload capability first, then install/service workflow, then features.
| Factor | GDI HAML | GDI JDMG | iControls PULSE |
|---|---|---|---|
| Daily cycles | — cycles/day | — cycles/day | Varies by series; verify by PULSE series documentation. |
| Battery backup cycles | — cycles | — cycles | Often marketed as built-in 24V battery backup (series dependent). |
| Speed / performance | — | — | Programmable speed and soft start/stop promoted (series dependent). |
| Clearance / footprint | — | — | Varies by model/series. |
| Environment fit | — | — | Verify enclosure rating per model/series. |
| Heater required | — | — | Depends on site + design; verify per documentation. |
GDI operators are sized and configured for the real workload. That’s why industrial customers choose GDI for high-use sites.
Send the door type, approximate weight, cycles/day target, environment (washdown, humidity, cold), available power, and clearance constraints. We’ll recommend HAML or JDMG and provide a spec-driven justification.