May-June 2007

Getting the Garbage Out

What’s the best way to get garbage out of a transfer trailer? Live floors, horizontal hydraulicejectors, and tippers each have advocates.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

By George Leposky

Comments


Live-floor technology is a duopoly. All trailer manufacturers buy their live floors from Hallco Manufacturing Co. in Tillamook, or Keith Manufacturing Co. in Madras, OR. Each sells a kit consisting of the floor mechanism and an integrated hydraulic system packaged in a frame that fits in the bottom of the trailer. Each firm has patented discrete aspects of its design. Hallco’s hydraulic system includes more hoses than Keith’s, which relies to a greater extent on hard metal plumbing. Dan Jackson, senior sales executive at Keith, notes that Keith has registered the Walking Floor name to describe its products.

Unloading a live-floor trailer takes seven and a half to nine minutes, depending on the density and weight of the load, as well as such design characteristics as stroke speed and hydraulics, says Don W. Wilton, vice president of sales and marketing for Hallco. Jackson says Keith sells a “running-floor” refinement that can reduce unloading time to about three minutes.

In a pushout trailer, a trunnion at the front of the trailer anchors a multistage hydraulic cylinder arm with a pusher blade attached to the end at an angle of 70 degrees. Extending the arm moves the blade toward the rear of the trailer, pushing the load out the rear doors.

Some pushout trailers have their own auxiliary engine and hydraulic power supply, while others rely solely on the tractor’s systems.

Cost Considerations
An ejection-technology decision precedes a large capital investment and a long-term commitment, so converting to another ejection technology before the end of the existing equipment’s useful life probably won’t be feasible. Choosing the wrong technology for a given application could dilute operating efficiency and profitability for years, but even if the appropriate technology is chosen initially, significant changes in a hauler’s operations before the equipment is ready to retire may force an earlier re-evaluation.

“A tipper costs $200,000 to $300,000, and its maintenance and operating costs run about $20,000 a year, says Darcey. “Diesel fuel is the main operating expense item.” Van Raden estimates tipper operating costs at about $5 an hour.

A tipper trailer is “a cheap sheet-and-post trailer,” says Wilton. “You don’t have to put anything mechanical in it. It’s just a blank generic trailer with no hydraulics and a wooden floor. You open it and tip it, like a Kleenex box you shake until all the tissues fall out. Trailer guys like it because they don’t have to outfit their trailers. They let the mills and dump areas incur the expense.”

Phil Bortz, vice president of sales and marketing for MAC Trailer Manufacturing Inc., in Alliance, OH, puts the cost of a tipper trailer at $40,000 to $45,000, and that of a live-floor trailer at $50,000 to $60,000.

Pushout trailers range in cost from $60,000 to $110,000, Riggs says. Their higher cost is due in part to the complexity of the hydraulic-ejection mechanism, and also to the need for a thicker skin on the trailer body to withstand the high sidewall pressures when the blade starts to compress and push out the load. Jackson says the side posts that lend strength to a trailer’s walls must be about 4 inches deep on a pushout trailer, versus 2 inches or less on a live-floor or tipper trailer, and the skin on a pushout trailer must be twice as thick (a quarter-inch versus an eighth of an inch).

With respect to maintenance costs, Riggs estimates that a live-floor trailer requires eight times more maintenance than a tipper trailer with a standard floor. Pushout trailers typically require less maintenance than live-floor trailers—but Wilton notes that if the telescopic cylinder on a hydraulic ejector fails, replacing it could cost $8,000 to $9,000.

Wear-and-tear issues set live-floor trailers apart from the others, Jackson says. All trailers wear most at the rear, where the garbage exits the trailer. Repairs to tipper and pushout trailers involve replacement of wood planks or metal sheeting on the floor at the rear.

On a live floor, Dan Jackson, senior sales executive with Keith, says, “you unbolt the slats and reverse them, almost doubling the wear-out time of a Walking Floor plank versus a tipper floor or a pushout with a static floor.”

The cost of discharging a load is another consideration. Tipper trailers must pay tipping fees unless the transfer-trailer operator also owns the tipper and landfill. Live-floor and pushout trailers don’t require a tipper’s assistance to unload, but may pay dumping fees, which could be the same as or less than tipper fees.

Payload and More
“More important than the cost of a trailer is how much payload you can haul in it,” insists Van Raden. Live-floor and hydraulic-ejection technologies add weight to a trailer and sacrifice load space.

Riggs says a typical tipper trailer weighs 12,000–13,000 pounds, a live-floor trailer weighs 15,500–18,000 pounds, and a pushout trailer could weigh as much as 23,000 pounds. Weight becomes a consideration as a rig’s gross loaded weight approaches the legal limit for the jurisdiction in which it operates.

A tipper trailer can carry 115–125 cubic yards of payload, a live-floor trailer 85–90 cubic yards, and a pushout trailer just 75–85 cubic yards.

MAC Trailer Manufacturing provides a tipper-trailer refinement: smooth-side wall-panel construction using hollow-core extruded aluminum panels. “It affords an additional 6 cubic yards of payload over the traditional sheet-and-post tipper trailer,” Bortz says. “The sidewalls are thinner, so you gain more interior capacity. People are looking for ways to reduce the weight of the trailer, so more people are going to aluminum for municipal solid waste, though steel is still used in the scrap marketplace and for more aggressive and abrasive materials such as construction debris.”

Western Trailers offers a different refinement: the drop-center trailer, or “possum belly.” On a standard flat-floor trailer 42 inches wide, 102 inches long, and 13.5 feet high, dropping the floor by 18 inches increases payload space 22%, from 113 to 138 cubic yards. “When you top-load a drop-center trailer in a transfer station, it requires less compaction,” Taylor says. “You don’t have to tamp the load as much; you just push it in, so there’s less damage and less maintenance to the trailer. Also, the trailer handles better when you get that load low.” Drop-center trailers have been hauling wood chips since the late 1960s. Western Trailers built the first such trailers for refuse in the early 1990s, and Taylor says 95% of the tipper trailers his firm builds today have drop centers.

From Van Raden’s perspective, the key question to ask when selecting transfer vehicles for MSW is that of how much it costs to move one pound for the distance of one mile. He cites a study for a vehicle with an 80,000-pound gross weight that includes expenses for fuel, tires, insurance, maintenance, licensing, operating permits, a driver, a supervisor, a dispatcher, an office for the dispatcher, a shop, and parking for vehicles.

“Take that cost, then ask how many miles you’re traveling a day and multiply by the number of rigs to get what it’s costing per year to run these miles,” he says. The study, conducted in 1990, estimated the cost at $1.15 per pound per mile. Today it would be significantly higher.

Distance and Time
In general, the higher a hauling operation’s volume and the longer its haul, the more appeal tipper trailers have—assuming they are going to a landfill equipped with at least one tipper.

Photo: Columbia Tipper
Cycle time for this tipper—up, dump, and down again—is about three minutes.

“If you have a high volume with a lot of trailers, the tipper makes more money sense than anything else,” Darcey says. “The break point is around 300 to 500 tons per day, and it’s specific to each hauler based on distance, fuel cost, and the amount of volume he’s handling.”

“If the haul is over 40 miles, many people look toward tipper trailers,” Bortz says. “For shorter runs and for versatility, haulers lean more toward the live-floor system.”

A negative aspect of tipping is its total reliance on tippers. “If 20 trailers arrive at a tipper at the same time, they can’t all go on at once,” Jackson notes. “While one is unloading, the others are waiting. With Walking Floor technology, they can back in side by side and all unload at the same time. If the distance of your haul is long enough, the wait time at the tipping platform becomes immaterial; but for a short haul, waiting in line may cost you one or two loads per day. A Walking Floor trailer doesn’t require any other unloading device that would tie up your fleet.”

Jackson points out that live-floor trailers can unload on a tipper. “When you pull in and there’s no line, if the landfill charges the same whether you use the tipper or not, you just let them tip. You don’t have to use your hydraulics and Walking Floor. If there’s a line, you use the Walking Floor. You see that done most often in the forest industry. It’s less common in municipal solid waste, but it does occur.”

Photo: ESI Waste
Bales are unloaded at a rail yard in Kentucky.

Other Pros and Cons
People who don’t like tippers also complain about having to disconnect and then reconnect the tractor and trailer; the difficulty of backing onto the tipping platform in inclement weather and muddy terrain; stability of the tipper when it’s working on an uneven, uncompacted surface; the potential for high winds or wind sheer to overturn a tipper and the trailer it’s unloading; and the possibility that the tipper’s hydraulic cylinder could get stuck in an extended position with a trailer aboard, requiring complex and costly repairs. “If you destroy a tipper, then your whole fleet is shut down,” cautions Wilton.

Tipper proponents say some of these concerns are irrelevant and others are highly unlikely. They cite safety benefits for operators and drivers in tipper operation. “You’re on an island. That’s where you do all your work,” Van Raden says. “No ’dozers or compactors are operating around you, and a tipper is well-lit at night.”

Advertisement

Pushout trailers have what Wilton calls “pinch points,” where someone could fall in and land behind a moving blade. “The telescopic cylinder is unforgiving,” he says. “It will crush everything that’s in the trailer.”

Wilton says a live-floor trailer is the safest technology of all. “You can stand on it while it’s moving,” he explains. “It won’t pinch or bite you; it just slides under your feet.” Next Page >

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get MSW Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our MSW email newsletter!