January-February 2006

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Grinders and Shredders Come Out of the Woods

Hurricanes along the Gulf Coast, tornadoes in the Midwest, and other natural disasters present the need for industrial-grade disposal and recycling.

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By Marsha DeClue

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“If the base purchasing price is already low, you should see a great deal. Do your homework, check out the market, talk to existing customers about their experience,” Semler says. “Look at and physically visit sites where machines of your interest are running, compare prices and technologies and eventually make an informed decision.”

Work With Me, Babe
“We think outside the box and work very closely with our customers to provide the most cost-effective, long-term solutions, with as much flexibility in the system to accommodate future market changes that our customers will face,” Benway says. “We do that by listening to the customer first and foremost. Then we recommend the best solution to their needs. This process takes time and flexibility for adjustments to the system design in order to provide the most effective long-term solution. It is better to work out as many concepts on paper as needed and, as a team, agree on the final solution prior to manufacturing and installing equipment.”

PHOTO: SSI

“We work extensively with our customers,” says Morey. “In the recycling of shingle waste, we have worked diligently with the shingle recyclers to develop machines that wear better and produce a more uniform product without creating heat that may gum up the machine. Working with the customers has tremendously improved the processing of shingle waste into an acceptable raw material for hot-mix asphalt while eliminating the need to screen the processed shingles. Our customers generally meet and work with our engineers to get the changes that they want in the machines.”

For another Bandit customer, the company modified the 3680 to follow a rotomill to properly size and mix ground asphalt. Afterward, it could be fed into a paver in a cold-place paving operation.

“We frequently run service schools for our customers and dealers,” says Morey. “We also provide a trained service technician when we deliver each machine. The technician spends a couple of days with the customer and machine, making sure the operator and owner are familiar with all the functions of the machine and the maintenance required.”

Bandit products are supported by an extensive dealer network, says Morey. “There is a group of trained parts and service technicians available via phone or online. We have factory service and repair and six complete service trucks that are equipped with nearly all of the parts and tools necessary to operate our Beast Recyclers,” he says. “We have a staff of trained service technicians that travel the country servicing and demonstrating our machines.”

“People are just stupid sometimes when it comes to their own safety,” says Semler. “Something downright dangerous would be to stay and remain within 20 to 30 feet of the machine while processing material. Or to try to do anything close to any spinning wheel, roller, etc., to ‘save time’ and not shutting down the machine in the first place.

“The penny spent in preventive maintenance is the dollar saved in repairs. That’s what I believe in and what’s true for a lot of things, including heavy equipment and HAMMEL slow-speed, high-torque primary shredders. Just a few simple daily things, like basic daily cleaning, unwrapping everything that wrapped around anything spinning, regular fluid control in the morning, regular check for little leaks, greasing and oiling—all these simple things can prevent breakdowns.”

Safety features are part of the design in many cases. Morey says because Bandits grind in a downward direction, material is pulled into the machine. “Safety lock-out systems are provided so the machine can’t be operated when the machine is being serviced. Safety locks secure the top feed wheel so that it can’t accidentally fall on someone who might be servicing the unit,” he says. “Kill switches are mounted on the side of the machine. All the units are operated with a remote control, so there is no need for an operator at or near the unit. All of our units have had these basic safety features from the onset.”

Final Product Affects All
As a large production builder, Max Wade, vice president of Artistic Homes Inc., Albuquerque, NM, has seen the economic impact of C&D waste. “Two of the biggest issues we run into are the amount of money we spend on construction waste and the environmental impact we have as such a big-volume builder,” he says. “Since we’ve been using Packer Industries horizontal grinders, our waste stream has been cut drastically, our handling costs are way down, and we’ve been able to reuse these organic materials as valuable resources.”

Wade builds some 800 homes a year at the affordable end of the market. His company is the largest local home builder in New Mexico. He says he is saving almost $285,000 a year on dumpsters by recycling his construction waste. According to Wade, $900 to $1,100 was being added to the cost of construction of his typical 1,300-square-foot home because he was sending the contents of 22 dumpsters a week to the landfill. He has since cut those expenses by 95%.

Wade bought two Packer 750 grinders. The grinders were priced at $85,000, and he says they can handle a large volume of material, are safe for workers, and also fairly easy to maintain. The grinders extract about 95% of the nails that go into them. The nails are then culled by a magnetic pulley and spit into a bucket.

The grindings are mixed with cow manure and then stockpiled. After two years, they become compost for topsoil, potting soil, soil for football and baseball fields, and more. The product sells for about $16 a yard. Wade says he gives grindings away in exchange for having them hauled off.

Consultant Dagmar B. Epsten, president of The Epsten Group Inc., in Atlanta, GA, says C&D waste and its disposal are important aspects of every project. “As a LEED consultant, we strive to divert a minimum of 75% of construction and demolition waste from landfills for most of our projects. At Georgia Tech’s Technology Square, we achieved that goal and two LEED points for the LEED Silver certified management building, thanks to Packer Industries.”

“Using grinders and shredders has its drawbacks—such as landfill draining and gas generation issues,” says Giebelhaus. “And annually, costs to shred are roughly $711,000, but the fiscal gains of accessing to airspace far outweigh the costs and problems.”

Challenges in the Future
According to Ward, some of the biggest opportunities and challenges in C&D waste are imposed by developing regulations. “While states (i.e. Massachusetts) are beginning to seriously look at banning landfilling of C&D materials, which supports C&D recycling, other regulations are challenging the ability to develop cost-effective end products,” she says. “For example, there is a lot of discussion about whether utilizing processed C&D for alternative cover increases levels of hydrogen sulfide gasses at the landfill. In some cases, fuel or mulch products derived from mixed C&D are considered problematic due to high mercury concentrations or other contaminants.”

This means the C&D recycler has to be able to identify problematic materials and remove them from the process stream, or hand-select only the clean material to go in end products. Given the complex nature of mixed C&D, this is a significant challenge.

Morey says the biggest challenge facing the C&D waste industry is finding a market for the material that is being processed. “New markets are developing for C&D waste, including energy,” he says. “The recycling of shingles and tear-off shingles is becoming extremely more prevalent. Shingle waste is being recycled into hot-mix asphalt.”

Morey also predicts that future developments with the C&D reduction and recycling machines will focus on machines that produce a marketable end-product, produce more, and operate at lower costs.

“The permitting process to open a C&D processing facility is one of the most challenging things in the future,” says Benway. “It is a lengthy, expensive undertaking, which in the end is restricted.”

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Benway sums it up: “A business needs to be profitable in addition to providing a benefit to society by recycling this waste stream and reducing the residuals that end up in a landfill.”

The willingness to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars, a little planning, homework, and an onsite visit or two can help you ensure you choose the correct grinder or shredder.

Author's Bio: Marsha DeClue is a St. Louis, MO–based correspondent for business journals.

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