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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“The US seems to be just giving birth to the concept of onsite recycling,” says Schielein. “It’s a win-win all the way around.” Ironhustler recently demolished an old vintage Holiday Inn from 1958 and an Applebee’s in East Peoria, IL. By using the Rubble Master RM80, it was able to produce 11,000 tons of one-and-a-quarter-inch and smaller materials that could be engineered right onsite without being trucked off. The engineers approved this use as a substitute in the spec, and the material was sold to the new construction work going on in the area for $6 per ton.

“We bought that machine for our own use,” adds Schielein. “But due to the high exposure nature of the project, people started calling me to crush for them.

“I went from site to site crushing material to save folks the cost of trucking material. By February 2005 [the initial work with the RM80 had begun in August 2004], I had to purchase a second machine because I had so much work.”

Ironhustler’s commercial industrial work includes power plants and related clients. On demolition work or site prep for a new development, the company turns the asphalt or concrete found there directly into a gradable aggregate.

“Our mobile, tracked, recycling crusher gives operators gradable aggregate in one pass,” says Schielein. “We take all the concrete, masonry, and asphalt and recycle it to whatever the engineer recommends—such as a three-minus—and use it for the backfill.”
The company is 60% industrial in its workload, 40% commercial, and probably 30% demolition, which keeps growing each year.

“There are other mobile tracked crushers around, but we’re on the smaller side with our 25-ton machine. But I’ll go out and crush against any of those big ones side by side on the same job; at the end of the day I’ll give you more of a gradable aggregate.

“Ours is partially hydraulic and partially electric for the crushing operation, which means we can track down a road and keep tracking and crushing at the same time. I’ve even created a separate company, On-Site Recycling, to deal with the Rubble Master end of the business.”

Schielein also goes into ready-mix concrete plants in the area and helps them restructure their yards to avoid costly trips to dump extra waste and wash out the trucks at a recycle yard. “I’m in there four times a year, helping them recycle their waste and providing them with a sellable product for their customers.

“The inch-and-a-half, inch-and-a-quarter-minus material is actually superior to most coring materials as base under floor slabs, sidewalks, drives, or paving. The concrete guys can achieve compaction with about 30% less labor under recycled material.”

Photo: Rubble Master
In the quarry or on the demolition site, mobile crushers can turn tough material into gradable fill.

With the ability to do onsite recycling, Ironhustler Excavating deconstructed a few car dealership buildings, doing some controlled demolition. “We ‘eat’ the buildings as we take them down, separating everything out, pulling all steel and metals out. All debris goes to the landfill with as much masonry, such as block walls and concrete kept as clean as possible. Then we come in with our crusher, recycle it, and leave it in a pile for a base for them to repave their parking lot with.

“Our competition has to haul it off, and the owner has to buy material for fill. On one job we calculated that this method saved him some $14,000 dollars. He has a pile of material onsite now, worth that much money. We have to sell the concept of that to a lot of owners. But when we sit down and show them where the hard money is, it’s a different story.”

Ironhustler Excavating also uses DustBoss fog cannons for dust control on job sites.

“We’ve always looked for the edge in technology,” adds Schielein. “I’d say our crusher is some eight years advanced in technology over any other mobile tracked crusher. We’re always looking for a better, more feasible way to do the job, something we keep working at.”

Long History With Crushing Machinery
The past 85 years have seen three generations of the Hartl family gathering knowledge about stone. This knowledge started in the family’s own gravel pit and allowed the Hartls to start producing crushers and screeners in the 1980s. Today, Powercrusher USA LLC is a leading producer and designer of mobile crushing and screening equipment, offering a wide range of products to meet customer demands: track-mounted jaw crushers, impact crushers, vertical-shaft impact crushers, screening plants, and optical belt scales. The Austrian company brings long-term know-how and bold new technological development together and is a global leader in crushing and screening technology, earning several design-excellence awards over the past few years.

Being both dynamic and innovative has helped this manufacturer to succeed. Its plants are fitted with cutting-edge technology and distributed and serviced by a professional global dealer network. It also has a selection and range of machines designed to accommodate all customers’ requirements in this competitive industry.

This year’s turnover for the company is expected to increase by 50% to over 60 million Euros.

“A booming economy in Eastern Europe, where infrastructure improvements are required, helped our bottom line,” says Dominik Hartl, co-owner with his brother Alexander. “A lot also rests on the fact that the East-EU countries are now getting to be and trying to stay on a level that Western Europe has been accustomed to for years. Recycling and onsite operations are becoming the norm. This is in line with environmental trends, and we build the machines to accomplish this.”

Crusher and Screening Manufacturer in Southeastern US
RR Equipment manufactures a complete line of crushing and screening equipment in Lancaster, SC. Co-owner Bob Rossi points out that the higher fuel costs being experienced today, along with increases in dumping fees, make transport no longer a minor issue. “These things have driven a need for onsite processing,” says Rossi. “It makes financial sense; some folks are saving money and others are actually trying to create a niche market for themselves and take advantage of having a machine capable of moving in, being highly mobile, and still able to produce a decent product.”

The company’s main goal remains that of fitting any application and budget, mainly by growing along with its clients. “They may start out with a niche machine and then grow into needing a much larger high-production plant,” says Rossi.

“Even buildings, as long as the work is approved, can be ground up and used as base material for parking lots. You don’t have to visit the dump; you don’t have to buy stone from a rock quarry. We’re essentially recycling most of the building with no harm being done and without burning fuel or filling up a landfill.”

Three of the RR Equipment’s big machines ground up debris from the World Trade Center after 9-11. The company had crushers on Long Island at the time and one of their crushers was in New York during an attempt at delivery on the same day. The equipment’s magnets could remove any steel from the debris.

“We are one of the few US manufacturers in crushing and the first in the world to come out with a bucket crusher,” adds Rossi. “Our Crush-All is an attachment and this is joined by the Rebel Crusher, which is a step over into an ‘in-between’ line of equipment. It’s a tracked piece of compact crushing equipment and is radio-remotely controlled in its operation.

“The Rebel Crusher can be fed with a Bobcat. This is convenient, because most contractors out there have Bobcats or skid-steers. Its lightweight size means it can be towed behind a dump truck, as well. In addition to being incredibly mobile and compact, it’s full of features: a magnet, two screens for various sizes, and is diesel turnkey—operable in the middle of the desert if you want.”

The company is trying to keep up with the market by having machines that burn less fuel, are lighter weight, and still make economic sense. “We have a machine that a man is not making a long term investment to obtain. He can purchase our machines and start making money right away; monthly payments are very low.”

Rossi likes to point out that their machinery represents the evolution of listening to what their clientele is asking for. Smaller less expensive machinery may take a few extra days to do the job, but these days economically, that may be the way to go. Purchasability, operability, and ease of transport are RR Equipment’s bywords. “In essence, that’s what it’s all about with us. We can also easily service our products. We’re right here in the States.”

Filling a Growing Niche
Compact Concrete Crushers LLC of Maywood, NJ, distributes Komplet recycling equipment. This machinery is relatively small as crushing equipment goes. The Lemtrack 48-25 weighs only 3.5 tons. It can be towed to location with a half-ton pickup, where it can break down the job site, process all the concrete or asphalt, and recycle it in place, all with just two workers. The machine is small enough to be brought into house basements, crane-lifted for high-rise demolition, or even transported through an elevator shaft to demolish a building floor by floor.

“Carting costs can be reduced by two-thirds through the use of our crushers,” says Nicholas Baker, co-owner with Darren Becan. “By crushing material down, you’ll only have to use one container instead of three, leading to astronomical savings.

“They’re all remote control–operated up to 200 feet away. One man can be operating this machine, using a small skid-steer or excavator, doing all the work himself. This is a good way for one operator to do the work of two or three—at the same time.”

The two owners also have a decorative concrete business that they’ve had since before they got into the compact crusher side of their business.

When their small crusher equipment was getting borrowed a bit too much, they started to rent it out. Then they started their compact concrete crushing service.

The company’s RCB-6000, a rotary crushing bucket, is the first on the market, according to Baker. The RCB- 6000 is a crushing bucket attaching to any standard 3.5-ton skid-steer. It’s able to crush any onsite debris.

“The small machine, our 48-25, will crush up to 15 tons of concrete per hour,” he says. “That’s not a huge number, but then, this isn’t huge machinery. Our niche is the folks tired of paying the carting fees, dumping fees, fuel, and all the extra labor. This is a tremendous time and money saver.

“Here in New Jersey, the law requires that at least 30% of recycled goods must be used on demolition sites. This will be required as well, more and more across the country. This machinery can be operated in your neighbor’s backyard and you’d never even hear it. The big equipment is going the way of the dinosaur; we’re the tiny mammals that made it through the mass extinction of the big guys.”

From the remote position, such things as belt speed can be adjusted, moved forward, backwards, or turned around if the pile is getting too large in one position. Jaws can be opened in order to adjust the size, depending on the aggregate exiting, adjusting from three-eighths of an inch all the way up to three and three-eighths. Downtime can be kept to a bare minimum, since adjustments are made remotely. “Paying one man $15 dollars per hour, that person can also be doing the work of three people on the job,” says Baker.

“Because it’s a belt-fed system; it doesn’t matter to the feeding system if you are going uphill or downhill. Gravity is not involved for proper operation.”

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This machinery’s manufacturer is based in Senigallia, Italy, where production of the equipment takes place, as well as in the Republic of Slovakia.

“Even if everything falls apart with the economy and we go back to New Deal-style road-building projects, we’ll be there ready to help rebuild the infrastructure,” says Baker. 

Author's Bio: Peter Hildebrandt writes extensively on engineering and scientific subjects.

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