July-August 2009

Not the Same Old Grind

Typical uses for grinders and shredders include processing construction-and-demolition debris, stumps, logs, yardwaste, and other solid waste to produce mulch, compost, and boiler fuel, or as a waste-reduction measure at landfills and transfer stations. As the global economy changes and more focus is directed at recycling, they're beginning to appear in some rather nontraditional markets. Manufacturers help match the proper piece of equipment to the application and desired end product.

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Photo: Bandit Industries

By Lori Lovely

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With low-speed, high-torque technology, SSI shredders process a broad range of materials with low dust, low noise, and low operating costs. Ward lists types of materials handled, including some of the most difficult waste and material streams, such as mixed C&D, mattresses, carpets, railroad ties, stumps, furniture, and appliances. Once the bane of existence for shredders, metal is actually shredded, not merely sorted—thanks to shockload protection.

Industrial tub grinders, horizontal grinders, track grinders, shredders, and trommel screens are designed for applications as diverse as land clearing, high-volume composting, disaster cleanup and solid waste reduction. Ward says one of the most common uses in solid waste and recycling applications is volume reduction, which translates to reduced transportation and disposal costs as well as extended landfill life.

The processes involved include preshredding prior to sorting and separation to maximize overall capacity, optimize material flow, increase recovery rates and improve worker safety; primary shredding of bulky or contaminated materials before secondary processes to maximize system capacity and reliability; and fine shredding of residual materials, industrial byproducts, off-spec products, and confidential materials to meet specific size classification requirements.

Photo: Diamond Z
The DHZ 7000 series grinder from Diamond Z is a high-capacity, low-maintenance model suitable for large-scale woodwaste and land-clearing operations.
While the processes are similar, each market has different processing and end-product requirements. The choice of equipment depends on the desired product specifications. According to Peterson, if C&D material is recycled in an enclosed environment, a slow-speed machine is generally chosen for the primary reduction because it helps separate the metal and other materials so they can be screened and sorted into useful products. The woodwaste stream is then further reduced with a high-speed grinder for boiler fuel, mulch, or compost. “If size reduction is the primary goal, high-speed grinders are the best choice for C&D applications such as shingle grinding or rail-tie grinding,” he explains.

High-speed grinders also work well in other C&D applications; however, they may need to be specially configured for varying feedstock. Shingle grinding requires special bits, hard liners, and unique grates. Extra water is needed for lubrication and cooling. More contaminated C&D or bulky MSW requires slower grinding speeds, a floating anvil, heavy-duty grates, a pinned rotor, and an impact-resistant conveyer conveyor belt.

Peterson’s largest grinder, the 950-horsepower–1,200-horsepower 67 series is suited to C&D applications because it can be configured for a slower rotor speed and it features a heavy-duty pinned rotor, impact-resistant conveyor belt, floating anvil, and heavy-duty C&D grates. Peterson mentions that it also excels in high-capacity mulch and composting operations.

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Although most established customers have a pretty good idea of their needs, Donovan says it’s important to consider what is being processed, how much is being processed and what size end product is desired when selecting grinders and shredders. “We offer what they need, not just what we have.”

CBI’s flagship is the 8400, unchanged for 11 years. With two heads, it can convert from a chipper to a grinder with the change of rotors and screen system. The advantage over other microchippers, he explains, is that it can process different wastestreams with a change of attachments. Other benefits include a four-pocket chipper that consistently makes quarter-inch-to-three-eighths-inch-fiber-length chip and a solid steel rotor that can handle contamination, phone poles, and railroad ties. It’s available track-mounted, wheel-mounted, and stationary, in diesel or electric power. “You can adapt the machine to the need,” Peterson says. “Our models 6400 to 8400 are versatile.” He says that’s important these days, when customers are looking at different markets for additional work. Next Page >

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