November - December 2009

MRFs and Diversion

MRF equipment suppliers are developing new technologies to divert more materials away from landfills.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

Photo: Northshore Manufacturing

Additional Article Content

By Carol Brzozowski

Comments


Bryant notes that the tub grinder is time-and-energy efficient due to the fuel it consumes for the amount of material it grinds.

“This machine has the largest fuel tank available,” he says. “This thing runs eight hours a day and we fill it with about two weeks worth of fuel.”

Factors such as safety, maintenance, automation, accuracy, and through-put are those elements municipalities such as Valdosta consider when seeking a return on the investment in equipment that will help them achieve those goals.

Safety is a prime issue among equipment manufacturers.

“Every year, there are addendums to the ANSI and OSHA standards,” Smith points out in reference to safety. “As the equipment and the processes change, the safety regulations change with them to provide the safest environment possible to the equipment operators.

“With the increased level of automation, operators are doing fewer manual tasks, therefore reducing exposure to on-the-job injuries,” she adds. “Operator training and thorough equipment manuals are also under constant review and alteration to be current and accurate.”

With any accident having the potential to be a major one in the baling industry, safety is of prime importance, says Todd Wondrow, president of Excel Manufacturing, a baling equipment supplier.

While he notes his company is active with WASTEC’s standards committee responsible for the ANSI Z245 baler safety standard, “unfortunately, far too many baler accidents can be all or partially attributed to improper operation and/or blocked-out safety features,” he says.

“We try to develop features that are not only safe, but encourage the operator to use them as a benefit to their work. Our Mobile Command is a good example of a system that reduces work for the material feeder, yet makes it safer for him or her to complete their job.”

Maintenance is a key factor in the longevity and efficiency of a MRF operation, says Smith.

Photo: Harris Baler
Solid waste operations are seeking
equipment that provides efficiency and
accuracy against a backdrop of safety.

“Our customers are provided a manual with detailed descriptions of the preventative maintenance items for each piece of equipment,” she says. “There are recommended spare parts lists included as well as specifications for hydraulic oils, maintenance intervals, and safety concerns such as lock-out/tag-out.”

The ability to diagnose electronic systems is a “hot topic” these days, says Wondrow.

His company used diagnostic telephone modems as a standard option in the mid-1990s and has since expanded its diagnostic and communication capabilities to include Ethernet connections that allow company technicians access to a baler directly over the Internet. The Ethernet-capable hardware also offers the option of WIFI and cellular wireless connections if necessary.

“With these new communication capabilities, we are developing many new reporting and diagnostic options that are already helping our customers monitor production from their office desktop computers and possibly a laptop on the other side of the world,” Wondrow points out.

As for industry automation, Wondrow argues that it’s difficult to find a better success story in the application of ingenuity and technology than what’s evident in a modern day MRF.

“A combination of magnetics, eddy current, infrared, machine vision, X-ray, and mechanical sorting cause plastics, cans, paper and OCC to seek out their respective bunkers as if they had a mind of their own,” Wondrow points out. “This wide variety of recyclables being sorted in massive volumes all within one facility require processing for shipment fast and often.”

Advertisement

What it has meant to his company is that now its equipment must be able to process high volumes of products and perform on-the-fly commodity changes, Wondrow says.

To that end, his company has responded with technologies that allow its balers to be fed and materials to be changed with no operator present on the baler platform. 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!