Buyer's Guide 2009

Compact Impact

Mobile crushers, especially compact varieties, are helping to change how things are done on many job sites.

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By Peter Hildebrandt

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Onsite crushing can lead to on-the-spot use of material as fill. This means less hauling, less road liability, less fuel consumption, less subcontractor use, and, finally, less expense.

In addition, the time line for having the equipment pay for itself has also appeared to shrink, as the economy’s downturns ripple in our direction.

With such road reconstruction projects as rehabilitation and repair, onsite crushing and recycling of fill can effectively eliminate the hauling of ripped-up asphalt, not to mention the expense of fuel to take it to an offsite crushing facility—and the expense in having to buy more material for fill.

Roads are just one exploding area of growth with this equipment. Other applications appear to be growing as the word gets out about the costs versus savings.

Here are some conversations with a few of the players in this growing area.

Just Common Sense
Sand Science Inc. in Beaufort, SC, has supplied portable and semiportable screeners, conveyors, and crushers to the aggregate industry and to such users as quarries, sand plants, environmental cleanup contractors or industrial plants. During the past two years, owner Gerry Kenny noticed that the trend in the industry was for everything to get bigger and more expensive. Meanwhile, he also noted the upper trend in fuel prices, tightening of regulations, and the need to process material as close to the source of where it was generated as possible.

“Subsequently, I also noticed these two issues diverging,” says Kenny. “Some people can’t afford the prices of the equipment; neither can they afford to haul material far away and still have a workable business. Circumstances told me we needed smaller, more compact machinery able to be brought directly to the jobs—even the small jobs—and still be viable.”

The product Kenny came up with as a solution was the line of compact crushers from Guidetti Recycling Systems. He found them to be tidy compact crushers, easy to move and efficient to operate—and their smaller engines burned less fuel.

“It’s practical to bring a small crusher like this to a small job and take care of 300 to 1,000 tons of material and reuse it on that job rather than tying up the cost of hauling it off plus the fuel costs and clogging up the roads. There are a whole lot of issues that are solved right there if you can bring just that one piece of equipment to do the 500 tons of crushing on a job. On an environmental job, this is an especially attractive option, as the liability of taking something offsite has been removed.”

Kenny found a lot of interest in this crusher at the recent ConExpo show, as those who saw it found a viable, less expensive machine for purchase by a smaller contractor—one which gives them a whole different set of working parameters on the job. Jobs can now be bid without having to worry about trucking. Such contractors include those for utilities, pipelines, or demolition, or those involved in modifying houses.

Sand Science has other machinery that it has incorporated with the Guidetti equipment, including compact screeners and tidy conveyors allowing users to duplicate what a large plant would do. “Our ‘plants’ costing a few hundred thousand dollars do everything the larger ones costing a few million dollars will do,” says Kenny. “They’re just smaller in size and capacity—and investment.”

“We see ourselves on the cutting edge of compact processing equipment, including screening and recycling of various different types of materials, glass, stone, concrete, bricks, or even imported minerals that have come in at the wrong size and may just need to be processed to a smaller size at a warehouse rather than be dumped as waste. The whole idea is to convert something into a usable product from what was unusable or too prohibitive to dispose.

“We’re a unique business in that we’re smaller and more hands-on, and we do all sorts of projects. But I noted this trend in the industry before the economy started souring. Fuel prices are not coming down—period. Europe has lived with five-dollar-per-gallon diesel for years, so they’ve been ahead in reuse and innovation. But North America does need to do some catching up.

“Also, not everything should be done for financial rewards. You should do something because it’s the right thing to do, as well. The potential for payoff with compact crushing is there in both the short term and the long term. We’ve got more stuff in the pipeline to make it more viable for small guys to afford a piece of machinery and do things on the job site to make them more competitive. At present, too much good stuff is simply hauled off and wasted in the US.”

Long History in the Field
Terex Cedarapids has a long history of providing a wide variety of crushers to the field for crushing all types of rock as well as concrete, building rubble, or other materials. Terex Cedarapids features a line of jaw and impact crushers that are track-mounted with onboard folding conveyor systems. While the larger-sized machines can be found in stationary quarries, the majority of the Terex Cedarapids equipment is placed on trailers that can be readily moved from site to site.

“A contractor may have access through ownership or leases to 10 to 15 small quarries, but only two or three crushing circuits,” says Dan Slife, Terex Cedarapids application and system specialist. “Many of these quarry sites do not have a need for continuous crushing year-round. The contractor will send in a portable crushing circuit to process and stockpile various products, depending on the needs of that specific area, before moving to another site.”

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Terex Cedarapids equipment has been involved with onsite recycling for years. “The construction rubble is crushed to size and then redistributed as base material for parking lots and roads,” says Slife. “The Terex Cedarapids recycle systems prove themselves daily in the field.”

Recently, Terex Cedarapids has introduced its new Mobile Aggregate Crushing System, or MACS. The system is used in shot rock quarries, sand-and-gravel operations, and various recycle applications. All transfer conveyors to move the material through the crushing circuit are onboard and fold hydraulically for travel. Next Page >

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