May 2009

Basics of Crushing, Grinding, and Chipping

The popularity of onsite recycling is growing.

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Photo: Rubblemaster

By Daniel C. Brown

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The type of crusher most often used by recycling contractors is the horizontal-shaft impact crusher, Schreiner says. A rotor with blow bars spins and strikes the material to break it. The material gets hit several times before it falls out the bottom.

Maintenance Required
The biggest issue on a crusher operator’s learning curve is maintenance, says Schreiner. For an impactor, it might be necessary to flip the wearing steel over every week or every month, depending on the material you’re running. But for a jaw crusher, depending on your material, you may go for six months to a year before you touch a wearing part.

What about the choice between tires or tracks under your crusher? Tire-and-chassis (portable) plants must be blocked up, so they take longer to set up than a track-mounted unit. With a track-mounted unit, you drive it off the trailer and it’s ready to work. A tracked machine is more popular for moving around the job site, and a portable plant is better for stationary applications once you’re onsite. But if you move often from site to site, a tire-mounted machine is probably the best choice.

Most portable plants rely on a separate power source, so that needs to be hauled on another trailer, says Schreiner. Tracked plants usually have a self-contained power source.

At Rubble Master, Hottenroth offers the following criteria for choosing an onsite crusher:

  • The crusher’s end product should have a high resale value and should be recyclable.
  • The crusher should be easy to transport and set up.
  • The crusher should offer ease of maintenance.
  • The production rate should be good.
  • Existing loading equipment should have appropriate capacity.

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Rubble Master’s crushers process concrete, asphalt, brick, and natural stone. The company offers three models of crushers with production capacities ranging from 60 tons per hour up to 250 tons per hour. All three units are impact crushers that can produce material down to three-quarters of an inch or smaller. Hottenroth says his crushers are very fuel efficient, burning from 3 to 5 gallons per hour. Wearing parts cost 30 cents per ton or less of material produced. By the end of 2009, Rubble Master will have nine dealers in North America.

Tubs Versus Horizontal Grinders
For land-clearing projects, two types of grinders—tub and horizontal—are commonly used. “Tub grinders generally perform better with heavy, large-diameter material such as stumps and root balls,” says Chris Nichols, environmental sales manager for Vermeer Corp. “But if processing longer raw material is the consistent application, a horizontal grinder may be the best choice.” Vermeer makes both types. Next Page >

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