November - December 2009

MRFs and Diversion

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

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Photo: Northshore Manufacturing

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By Carol Brzozowski

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“These systems reduce mistake and minimize labor costs, which can easily budge out profits in today’s tight markets,” he says.

Smith is seeing more automation coming into the field relative to specific types of materials.

“Automation is growing from the way the material is picked up to how it is sorted and processed into the reclaimed product,” she says. “For example, you can now throw insulated copper wire into a machine and it is chopped and separated to the point where the insulation comes out independent of the clean copper.”

Excel manufactures a wide range of balers, from 20-horsepower single-ram horizontals up to 200-horsepower two-rams.

“Despite the recently lower commodity prices, a surprisingly strong segment of our business has been our large two-ram machines,” says Wondrow. “In many cases, these large two-ram balers are placed where historically open-end auto tie balers would have been used.” The reason for this change is twofold, says Wondrow.

Photo: Bulk Handling Systems
Throughput is only restricted by the money that operators are willing to spend.

“First, the typical cost of wire is significantly reduced when replacing an open-end auto tie with a two-ram,” he says. “This wire cost savings dramatically reduces processing cost per ton.

“Second and no less important is the ability of the two-ram balers to make rapid-clean changes from one material to another without cross-contamination and virtually no production downtime.”

Wondrow points out that one can hardly watch a NASCAR Sprint Cup series race without hearing a commentator say, “Races are won and lost in the corners.

“Similarly, having the fastest baler in today’s MRFs just isn’t enough,” he adds. “A baler must be fast, but if turning the corners—such as switching from OCC to mixed paper to UBCs and back—causes significant slowdowns, then all the speed is for naught.”

Necessary to an efficient MRF operation is equipment accuracy. Tom Musschoot, marketing director for General Kinematics Corp., which manufactures vibratory processing equipment, points out there are a host of screening technologies on the market that do an efficient job, depending on the desired outcome.

“Innovations such as optical sorting have taken automated processing to the next level,” says Smith. “Material contamination is counterproductive and often results in a less valuable end product or a complete rejection of the material being recycled.”

But automation also needs to be paired with accuracy and accuracy is a cornerstone of efficiency.

Wondrow says Excel has worked for 15 years to perfect its Autonetics system to automatically control the baling process to create optimum target size bales, consistent weights, reduce shear/eject jams and in so doing, eliminates the need for a baler resident operator.

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Wondrow cautions that throughput is a “buyer beware” scenario.

“Oftentimes, baler purchase decisions are made based on cycle time published on an equipment brochure,” he says. “Unfortunately, this is ‘dry cycle time‘, which means no load. Choosing a baler based on dry-cycle time is about as valid as choosing between two sports cars based on which one spins the tires faster when lifted up on jack stands. Unless you’re planning to bale air, the best shopping strategy is to visit current equipment owners doing similar commodities. Next Page >

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