September-October 2006

Gnarly Solutions for Gnarly Materials

“We should close the US Patent Office, because everything that can be invented has been invented.” —Remark erroneously attributed to Charles H. Duell, commissioner of the US Patent Office in 1899

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By George Leposky

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Ask people who make equipment for processing greenwaste from site clearing and brush control about how their technology will improve in the decade to come. You’ll get a variety of answers.

Some will say their machines are just fine now, thank you—but then they’ll concede off the record that they’re working on enhancements and don’t want to tip off the competition.
Still others will acknowledge that the equipment they sell today, while greatly improved from previous models, represents a transition to even greater efficiency and cost-effective operation.
“In general, as employees become harder to find, you’ll see equipment that is more efficient and reliable, and easier to use with fewer people,” says Mike Byram, senior director of the environmental business segment at Vermeer Manufacturing Co., in Pella, IA.

“Components need to last longer, do a better job for a given amount of horsepower, and produce a better product coming out the back end. We’re always looking for materials that last longer and wear less.”

Fuel costs also will influence future C&D equipment designs. Byram anticipates the emergence of alternative fuels, including ethanol derived from wood as a substitute for gasoline, and biodiesel to replace petroleum-based diesel fuel. “Things being buried today will be burned for energy tomorrow,” he says.

Out of The Woods
For stripping vegetation from a construction site, manufacturers offer a wide range of whole-tree chippers and grinders. Chippers use sharpened knives on a disc or a drum to make a dimensional chip; grinders employ a hammer mill to pound trees into shreds.
A chipper processes woody material more rapidly than a grinder does. “A chipper can dispose of a typical 80-foot tree in less than a minute,” says Jerry Morey, president of Bandit Industries Inc., in Remus, MI, “but it won’t tolerate dirt and debris. It uses a high-tensile knife that needs to be sharp to work properly.”

Morey says that over the past 16 years, Bandit has designed better feed systems for its chippers, with in-feed trays that make collecting piled brush easier. “We’ve also developed bigger, more productive machines that allow you to take a whole tree, crush its limbs and branches, and force all the material into the chipper rather than having to cut it,” he says.

McCloskey International's 616 track trommel screener is designed for processing large amounts of topsoil, composting, or CAD waste.

Morey predicts the next decade will see “a lot of development in drum-style chippers.” Compared to the disc-style chippers that are today’s industry standard, “a drum-style chipper will be more compact but will allow for a larger-diameter opening so you can put more material in it at one time.”

Vermeer makes chippers ranging in capacity from 6–20 inches and in power from 25–250 hp. Some of the smaller ones have gas engines, but most are diesel-powered.

Byram says the future of chippers involves “increased emphasis on safety and on power density—more capacity in a smaller package.”

Horizontal vs. Tub Grinders
Freestanding grinders come in two varieties, horizontal and tub. Horizontal grinders pull the material to be processed into the hammer mill on a conveyor belt or a steel-track chain; tub grinders have an opening on top into which the material is dropped, relying on gravity to feed the hammer mill. “Tub grinders are more productive than horizontal grinders in land clearing, primarily because gravity keeps the hammer mill loaded,” says Ed Hardesty, operations manager at CW Mill Equipment Co. Inc., in Sabetha, KS.

He notes, however, that tub grinders have a tendency to throw material out of the feed bed. “In a congested area with a lot of people around, there’s no room for a safety zone with a 300-foot radius around the machine. We can put an optional anti-throw protection device like a baseball backstop on some of the machines, but if you position it to stop all material from being thrown out, you can’t feed it.” In such situations, the horizontal grinder is the machine of choice.

Hardesty says that in recent years hydraulic functions and the computer electronics that control the hammer mill and tub have improved. Today some grinders are self-propelled, roaming a work site on the same Caterpillar undercarriages used for bulldozers and excavators. “They can be operated remotely with a control range of almost 400 feet—the distance between home plate and the outfield wall in some baseball stadiums,” Morey says.

Morbark Inc., of Winn, MI, has horizontal-grinder models operated by remote control from the cab of an excavator that feeds material into the grinder. “This ‘smart feed’ computerized high-quantity feed system boosts the production level by providing a constant feed,” says Larry Burkholder, Morbark’s southeastern regional manager. “It also senses the hydraulic pressure and how much horsepower is being required to grind the material, and when necessary it will slow the feed to avoid jamming.”

In the future, grinders will be increasingly computerized, user-friendly, and productive, says Burkholder. “We’re just getting to the point at which remote controls on a machine allow the operator to scroll down and diagnose any problems. Oil pressure, temperature, hydraulic pressure, a feed jam-up—all are at his disposal in graphic form. Our machines now average 93% operating time.”

Morey also foresees advances in hydraulics and electronics that will enable a grinder to read the situation and automatically adjust its conveyor in-feed speed and other operating parameters for maximum performance and fuel economy.

Continental Biomass Industries Inc., of Newton, NH, makes the Magnum Force line of horizontal grinders, which have a patented offset helix rotor with four alternating rows of six hammers. “It’s a very efficient rotor design for processing material to uniform size,” says Aaron Benway, CBI’s East Coast regional sales manager. “The product size can range from 1-inch minus to 6-inch minus, and the machine can process up to 500 cubic yards an hour.”

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Magnum Force models cost $550,000 to $650,000. Benway explains that the more expensive models have a stronger rotor, shaft bearings, and grinding chamber to accommodate the added stress of processing greenwaste contaminated with rocks and other hard debris. Other options include a hydraulically operated split-clamshell opening to the grinding chamber and a choice of wheeled or self-propelled track units. 

Torque and Teeth
“The conveyor systems have become rollers supported by ball bearings to cut down on the horsepower required to convey material, and to transfer more horsepower to the grinding mill itself,” Hardesty says. “Most of the machines now come with a torque-converter drive, a fluid connection that allows the entire power unit to be more efficient and also protects the engine from any shock being transported from the mill.” Next Page >

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