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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Each trailer has its own hydraulic power unit to operate the run-on leveling jacks as well as the folding conveyor systems. All material transfer points are engineered for rapid setup and no spillage. The main power for the crushers, screens, and conveyors is all-electric and can be provided with line power or diesel gensets.

The combination of Terex Cedarapids Jaw Crushers and Rollercone Crushers has been used in recycle applications for over 40 years. “The large Jaw Crusher feed opening accepts construction rubble with ease and reduces the material to feed into the secondary Rollercone Crushers,” adds Slife.
“Also, our patented, automatic, hydropneumatic, tramp-iron relief system on the Rollercone allows uncrushable material—such as rebar—to pass through the crusher without overloading the machine. We feel the flexibility and durability of the Jaw/Cone crushing system is well-suited to the portable recycle contractor.”

On the Terex Finlay side of things, the smaller equipment is involved in projects such as recycled concrete and asphalt, stone quarries, sand-and-gravel operations and any other such work where the typical output is up to 500 tons per hour.

“Our typical customer is an excavation or demolition contracting company ripping up the asphalt or concrete to dump into one of our crushers,” says Jerod Crane, sales manager with Terex Finlay. “In general, our most popular equipment would be our Finlay 683 track-mounted screen plant. The Finlay 683 Supertrak and Hydrascreen incorporate the popular idea of a complete three-way split for a scraping, screening, and stockpiling unit with the latest in onsite mobility.”

Designed in two variations, the Supertrak model offers maximum on site mobility, incorporating a twin-track undercarriage that can be controlled from a hand-held radio control. The Hydrascreen model is a fully road-going version fitted with fifth-wheel coupling and twin braked axles. Their application ranges are limitless within the aggregates, recycling and demolition industries, processing such materials as sand, gravel, limestone, crushed stone, topsoil, coal, and demolition waste, according to Crane.

“We like to point out to those interested that we can provide a complete product line when someone has crushing and screening needs,” adds Crane.

Silence and a Network Are Golden
Rubble Master crushers enable operators to bring the crusher to the pile rather than vice versa. The company’s first machine was a 6.5-ton machine, the RM50. The first big success of the company came with the RM60 and its ability to process between 50 and 80 tons of concrete and mixed demolition waste onsite or run as a small recycling operation with a prescreen and a single- or double-deck screen afterwards, so operators can process boulders up to 15 inches into fine material.

The track-mounted RM80 features dimensions within the legal load limits, providing mobility onsite, and is highly transportable, moving easily from site to site. “We consider ourselves the inventors of compact recycling,” says Nikolaus Hottenroth, Rubble Master business development manager for North America.

“This means the machines are sufficiently compact to transport them wherever there is a demolition job with processing onsite or in remote, sensitive areas where it may be impossible to haul off or haul on lots of materials. For this reason, the RM80 and the other models are very environmentally friendly as well, with low emissions, low fuel consumption, and dust-controlled with a built-in dust-suppression system.”

Due to the equipment’s low noise levels, it’s often run right next to schools and hospitals, according to Hottenroth. “Usually when people finally get close to the machinery, they’re amazed to find out that what they were hearing from a distance was not the crusher but the excavator that is loading material into the crusher.

“The success of the concept of onsite recycling has allowed us to revolutionize the business model of many contractors. There are now many trying to get into the market of compact crushers as well. It’s more difficult for them, as they came from large crushers and are trying to scale down, whereas we have always built compact equipment and can scale up easily, remaining within legal load dimensions and keeping a very transportable, versatile equipment.”

Instead of using hydraulics, the diesel-electric-drive concept allows operators to drive the impact crusher with a relatively small diesel engine, along with the use of a small hydraulic unit for the tracks and for all the hydraulic adjustments done when working with various crushing specs. The diesel engine also powers a generator, so all conveyors and the magnet belt for separating rebar are powered by electric motors. Thus, the diesel consumption is kept 30%–50% lower than comparable crushers, according to Hottenroth.

The company also supplies lots of know-how from a network of experienced users, dealers, and its own research department to best make onsite crushing profitable. A prospectus gives them the material they must process, the end product needed, the hardness of the material, and whether or not it’s natural stone, and this will tell them exactly what type of model, settings, blow bars to run and what type of training will be needed in order to run that business profitably.

“Businesses are finding a paradigm shift in the demolition process with this equipment and concept—especially in the United States,” adds Hottenroth. “Things are really taking off in the US. Another plus is that any truck that can be taken off the road by running a crusher onsite reduces the liability exposure, according to the dealers I’ve spoken to.

“We try to live up to our mantra: ‘We are happy when our clients make money.’ Also, we always make sure we build the support that is needed for that, so as an end user, you are not too remote from an existing dealership.”

Keeping Expenses Low in a High-Cost Region
Cavaliere Onsite Recycling of Stamford, CT, has recycled asphalt, concrete, and rock material using a Rubble Master RM80 for a year now (the company has been in business for over 50 years), and the equipment has helped tremendously in keeping costs down. “We no longer have to pay the dump to obtain material,” says DJ Cavaliere, co-owner. “We do everything ourselves now, including onsite crushing and recycling for customers, which helps defray the costs.

“Though we do travel around the area with our screeners, crushing, and recycling onsite occasionally, we’ll screen right at our yard. Keeping a 425-horsepower truck off the road, one making an average of 10 loads, burning up fuel, man-hours, and causing a potential liability, compared to simply having an excavator and loader running, creates a tremendous savings for us.”

On job sites, ground material is incorporated into sub-base or backfill material. Cavaliere sees the costs involved with removing debris and waste. “Dumping the waste is very costly today. If you can recycle your own material in-house you’re keeping your trucks off the road, reducing the liability, and recycling all at the same time.”

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Versatility on Job Sites
When Ironhustler Excavator President Dave Schielein got into recycling in 2002, the company did onsite commercial demolition or site demolition, while area asphalt and concrete recycle yards were operated by the big competitors at that time. The company had been in construction-and-demolition work for 20 years. “I didn’t like the idea of doing all the site work, having them haul it off only to have to buy the material back from them,” says Schielein.

He wanted to find something where he could recycle it to a gradable aggregate directly on the site to make it acceptable to the engineers. Schielein spent a few years trying out various machines until he found one that suited his needs. He purchased it in 2004. Next Page >

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