The popularity of onsite recycling is growing.
A smaller
machine can be a smart choice when it comes to a crusher for onsite demolition
debris. Today’s smaller crushers make it cost-effective to move into a
demolition site, crush the concrete and asphalt, and either reuse the material
onsite or haul it away. Onsite crushing saves trucking costs, tipping fees at
the landfill, and labor expenses.
“Smaller
crushers are more versatile and profitable, especially for demolition
contractors,” says Nikolaus Hottenroth, business development manager for Rubble
Master Systems Inc., a crusher manufacturer that makes compact machines. “We see
a tendency toward smaller machines. I realized it at Conexpo 2008 when people
came to our booth and asked for smaller crushers.”
As evidence of
that trend, Rubble Master’s sales have doubled every year over the past three
years. In 2008, sales of crushers reached in the area of 40 units, he says.
“It’s mainly because of the economics of onsite crushing,” notes Hottenroth.
“Onsite crushing eliminates a lot of trucking, which saves fuel, labor and
insurance.”
At Telsmith
Inc., another crusher manufacturer, marketing manager Jim Schreiner says there’s
been an evolution toward smaller machines. Within the last 10 years, he says,
the industry started building smaller track-mounted units—mostly jaw crushers.
“More recently, in the past five years, they put impact crushers on tracks as
well,” says Schreiner. (Jaw crushers use compression to crush rock or concrete.
Impact crushers, or [ITALIC]impactors[ITALIC], either hit material with a hammer
or throw it against a hard surface.)
“Demolition
material is a different animal from natural stone,” says Schreiner. “If you use
a portable crusher, you need an excavator with an attachment to munch it up. You
need to prepare the material before you put it in the plant.”
Schreiner says
an impact crusher will make a higher percentage of material 2.5 inches or
smaller than will a jaw crusher. But an impact crusher will carry a higher
maintenance cost. With a jaw crusher, just the opposite is true—larger end
product, lower maintenance costs.
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.
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.
For some
materials, Nichols says, a tub grinder is perceived to have a higher production
rate, but the horizontal models may have the advantage when it comes to the
longer, bushier material found in land-clearing applications. “That is mainly
because the tub depth is limited, and when processing the longer material, long
branches may be difficult to feed. Horizontal grinders have the long feed table
and conveyor to guide material into the grinder, avoiding the sometimes tedious
task of material placement and manipulation,” Nichols says.
C.W. Mill
Equipment Co. Inc. manufactures the HogZilla lines of tub and horizontal
grinders. “If I could only have one of them, I’d rather have the tub,” says Tim
Wenger, president and sales manager at C.W. Mill. “That’s because if you clear
100 acres of land, the tub grinder should be able to grind everything on the
property without having to haul anything away for processing.”
For a tub
grinder, though, feed material needs to be processed down to at least 12 feet in
length. Eight feet would be better, Wenger says. A horizontal grinder can accept
100-foot-long trees, but it is limited on diameter. “Generally they log out the
bigger wood and push the rest of it into a pile for processing,” says
Wenger.
 |
Photo: Vermeer For some materials, a tub grinder may have a higher production rate,
while horizontal models may have the advantage with longer, bushier
materials. |
Tracks Versus Towable?
Tub and
horizontal grinders come mounted on tires as portable units, or with tracks.
Track-mounted machines must be loaded onto a trailer for transport. “If the
grinder will be used in applications where there will be muddy and uneven job
sites that will not accept a rubber-tired machine, the track-mounted unit would
likely be preferred,” says Michael Stanton, an assistant regional manager for
Morbark Inc., which manufactures tubs and horizontal grinders alike.
“But if the
machine will be moved frequently from job site to job site—or will be used
predominately in a mulch application where the material is brought in by truck—a
rubber-tired machine would probably be preferred, because the machine is easier
to transport,” he says. The transportation of most track-mounted units requires
special trailers, permits, and, sometimes, escorts.
With its tub
spinning up on top of the machine, a tub grinder can throw out branches and
debris from time to time. To prevent such debris from hurting anyone, some
manufacturers offer systems of iron bars that guard the tub and stop thrown
objects.
Jens Jensen,
sales representative at Diamond Z Manufacturing, says that he sees a definite
trend toward horizontal grinders and away from tubs. Diamond Z makes both types
of machines. People like the ability to process over-length material, and the
low feed height of a horizontal grinder,” says Jensen. “That’s where everybody
is moving. They like the control aspect of the force-fed ability of a horizontal
grinder.”
What edge does
Diamond Z offer? “We have a fluid coupler that replaces the entire clutch
assembly,” says Jensen. “The fluid coupler allows the mill to be engaged even
when it is partially blocked by material—without damage to the grinder. It’s a
softer engagement—it cuts down on the shock loads to the grinder.”
Self-Loader or No?
Many grinders
have self-loading units that permit an operator to pick up feed material with a
grapple and load the machine. Other grinders rely on a separate excavator to
feed material into the tub or conveyor.
“We’re not big
fans of putting loaders on grinders,” says Wenger of C.W. Mill. “A 10,000-pound
loader simply will not do the work of a 40,000-pound excavator. But if a person
is doing grinding for municipalities, let’s say, and someone else can push the
material to you, then a loader is okay.” C.W. Mill offers loaders on all but the
largest of it grinders.
Morbark offers
the self-contained loader option on its 11-foot and larger tub grinders, with
the exception of the Model 1600. If space for support equipment is limited, a
self-contained loader is a benefit, says Stanton. That way the operator can pick
material from a pile stationed next to the grinder.
 |
Photo: Bandit The cutter mills inside Bandit’s line of Beast grinders cut
material apart rather than hammer it. |
 |
Photo: Diamond Z Diamond Z’s fluid couplers allow the mill to remain engaged
even when partially blocked by material. |
A no-loader
machine would be utilized on a job site where there is only one support piece of
equipment and one operator. The operator can run the support machine from its
cab and control the grinder with a wireless remote control, Stanton points
out.
A grapple
loader on your tub grinder provides better visibility of the tub, Vermeer notes.
The loader cab provides better visibility of the tub cavity, so the operator can
load the tub more
efficiently.
Maintenance Is Important
The keys to
maintaining a wood grinder are consistent checks and replacement, when needed,
of such wear items as hammers, inserts, rakers, screens, and anvils. Other
maintenance imperatives include proper clutch adjustment and tub drive-chain
tension on tub grinders. Proper drive belts and in-feed chain tension for
horizontal grinders must be maintained to meet optimum production rates and
eliminate downtime, says Stanton.
Recognizing
that maintenance often gets neglected, Vermeer introduced the patented duplex
drum system for tub and horizontal grinders. This feature offers the operator
the ability to change out any individual hammer within minutes without removing
other hammers. Vermeer claims that this feature makes its drum maintenance more
efficient than competing models.
Bandit
Industries Inc. offers horizontal grinders powered by engines ranging from 180
horsepower up to 1,200 horsepower. “We use Caterpillar and Cummins engines and a
few John Deere engines,” says marketing manager Jason Morey. “Our grinders will
process everything up to 46-inch logs.”
Unlike those of
most traditional grinders, the cutter mills inside Bandit’s line of Beast
grinders cut material apart rather than hammer it. The difference is best
explained by comparing the action of an axe to a sledgehammer. “Which would you
prefer to use to cut down a tree?” asks Morey.
“We offer a
variety of teeth, depending on the application,” says Morey. “We have teeth
specifically designed for grinding roofing shingles, teeth for grinding trees
and brush, and teeth for pallets.”
Brush
Chippers in Two Styles
Brush chippers
are available in drum-style and disc-style models. Drum chippers are used for a
wide variety of applications where large volume wood reduction is needed. Drum
chippers excel in brush applications and cut like a shear as opposed to the
scissor action of a disc-style chipper, says Jason Showers, commercial sales
manager for Morbark.
The advantages
of a drum chipper are those of reduced dead space between the drum and feed
rollers, larger-diameter feed rollers to ease material climbing, reduced
material side slashing, ease of maintenance, and increased wear component life,
says Showers.
A disc-style
chipper cuts like a pair of scissors and excels in whole-log applications,
Showers says. Because of disc inertia, it is often argued that a disc chipper
uses less fuel and requires less horsepower to chip a given quantity of wood.
Traditionally, disc chippers have smaller feed rollers, sometimes making it
difficult to navigate large brush clusters. Choosing between a disc-style and a
drum-style chipper has a lot to do with personal preference and opinion. When
someone is shopping for new equipment, Showers says, most of the time it comes
down to what the person is comfortable with and what they have used in the
past.
 |
Photo: HogZilla No-loader machines work well on job sites with one piece of support
equipment and one operator. |
 |
Photo: Morbark Tub and horizontal grinders come mounted on tires as portable units,
or with tracks. |
Bandit
Industries makes disc- and drum-style units. “We’ve seen a definite trend to
drum chippers,” says Morey. The reason: drum-style chippers have larger throat
openings and are generally lighter in weight compared to a disc-style chipper.
In addition to a full line of brush chippers, Bandit offers a line of whole-tree
chippers that can accept trees with diameters ranging from 18 to 36 inches.
The whole-tree
chippers are offered on tracks or as tow-behind models. Tracks allow an operator
to take the chipper directly into the woods—the machine is loaded by a grapple
boom—while tow-behind chippers are for stationary applications.
Morbark
manufactures a complete line of tow-behind chippers with capacities ranging from
6 to 20 inches. The company makes a complete line of whole-tree chippers in
disc-style and drum-style models with capacities up to 30-inches.
So whether
you’re looking to crush concrete, grind up logs, or chip brush, there’s a
machine just waiting for you. Once you’ve done some research, the decision
becomes much easier.
Wood
Grinding Prospers in Mississippi
“We’ve had a
great year in 2008,” says Scott Hannon, owner of Triangle Maintenance Service
LLC in Columbus, MS. Hannon’s company grinds and recycles on the order of 60,000
tons of wood waste per year from three sources: industrial development sites; a
company-owned post-consumer recycling center; and wood waste brought to a
landfill in Columbus.
Much of
Triangle’s prosperity in 2008 stemmed from grinding timber cleared for a new
Toyota manufacturing plant in Blue Springs, MS. The main plant itself will cover
a 1,000-acre site that was largely wooded. Plus, Triangle ground and recycled
the timber from several hundred additional acres that will be developed in
connection with the Toyota plant.
Triangle’s
workhorse wood recyclers are three Vermeer grinders—a TG9000 tub grinder, a
TG7000 tub grinder, and an HG 6000 horizontal grinder. All three grinders are
mounted on chassis and tires.
At the peak of
work on the Toyota site, Triangle employed the two big tub grinders and six or
seven Komatsu PC 200 excavators. Selected excavators were fitted with shears to
cut the timber down to a maximum 12-foot length, while other excavators had
rake-and-thumb attachments to load the big tub grinders. Most of the 4-inch
minus wood material produced from the Toyota site was sold to Weyerhaeuser for
use as boiler fuel in a paper-manufacturing plant.
What were the
keys to success on the Toyota project? “Production,” Hannon answers—“Putting as
much material through those tubs as fast as we possibly could. That’s the big
trick. We can average between 150 and 200 tons per hour out of the tub grinders.
It depends on the nature of the wood. If you’re running hardwood, your
production will be on the low end. But if you run pine, that’s softer, and you
can get closer to 400 tons per hour.
“Sizing the
material is key. We use shears to size the trees down to 12-foot lengths or
less. As for diameter, it’s a 12-foot tub. If you can get it into the tub, the
machine will grind it up.”
The HG6000
horizontal grinder keeps busy most of the time at Triangle’s post-consumer
recycling center. Commercial tree trimming contractors bring woodwaste, and
other sources bring pallets, land-clearing waste, and consumer yardwaste. The
center also processes paper, cardboard, plastics, and aluminum and steel cans
for recycling.
Triangle
Maintenance Service has two divisions. The environmental division handles
wastewood recycling, the recycling center, and a rolloff container business. The
construction division builds slipformed curb and gutter, exterior concrete
pavements, sidewalks, and building foundations. As well, the construction
division erects construction signage and finish signage for roadway projects.