May 2009

Basics of Crushing, Grinding, and Chipping

The popularity of onsite recycling is growing.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

Photo: Rubblemaster

By Daniel C. Brown

Comments


“We offer a variety of teeth, depending on the application,” says Morey. “We have teeth specifically designed for grinding roofing shingles, teeth for grinding trees and brush, and teeth for pallets.”

Brush Chippers in Two Styles
Brush chippers are available in drum-style and disc-style models. Drum chippers are used for a wide variety of applications where large volume wood reduction is needed. Drum chippers excel in brush applications and cut like a shear as opposed to the scissor action of a disc-style chipper, says Jason Showers, commercial sales manager for Morbark.

The advantages of a drum chipper are those of reduced dead space between the drum and feed rollers, larger-diameter feed rollers to ease material climbing, reduced material side slashing, ease of maintenance, and increased wear component life, says Showers.

A disc-style chipper cuts like a pair of scissors and excels in whole-log applications, Showers says. Because of disc inertia, it is often argued that a disc chipper uses less fuel and requires less horsepower to chip a given quantity of wood. Traditionally, disc chippers have smaller feed rollers, sometimes making it difficult to navigate large brush clusters. Choosing between a disc-style and a drum-style chipper has a lot to do with personal preference and opinion. When someone is shopping for new equipment, Showers says, most of the time it comes down to what the person is comfortable with and what they have used in the past.

Photo: HogZilla
No-loader machines work well on job sites with one piece of support equipment and one operator.
Photo: Morbark
Tub and horizontal grinders come mounted on tires as portable units, or with tracks.
Bandit Industries makes disc- and drum-style units. “We’ve seen a definite trend to drum chippers,” says Morey. The reason: drum-style chippers have larger throat openings and are generally lighter in weight compared to a disc-style chipper. In addition to a full line of brush chippers, Bandit offers a line of whole-tree chippers that can accept trees with diameters ranging from 18 to 36 inches.

The whole-tree chippers are offered on tracks or as tow-behind models. Tracks allow an operator to take the chipper directly into the woods—the machine is loaded by a grapple boom—while tow-behind chippers are for stationary applications.

Morbark manufactures a complete line of tow-behind chippers with capacities ranging from 6 to 20 inches. The company makes a complete line of whole-tree chippers in disc-style and drum-style models with capacities up to 30-inches.

So whether you’re looking to crush concrete, grind up logs, or chip brush, there’s a machine just waiting for you. Once you’ve done some research, the decision becomes much easier.

Wood Grinding Prospers in Mississippi
“We’ve had a great year in 2008,” says Scott Hannon, owner of Triangle Maintenance Service LLC in Columbus, MS. Hannon’s company grinds and recycles on the order of 60,000 tons of wood waste per year from three sources: industrial development sites; a company-owned post-consumer recycling center; and wood waste brought to a landfill in Columbus.

Much of Triangle’s prosperity in 2008 stemmed from grinding timber cleared for a new Toyota manufacturing plant in Blue Springs, MS. The main plant itself will cover a 1,000-acre site that was largely wooded. Plus, Triangle ground and recycled the timber from several hundred additional acres that will be developed in connection with the Toyota plant.

Triangle’s workhorse wood recyclers are three Vermeer grinders—a TG9000 tub grinder, a TG7000 tub grinder, and an HG 6000 horizontal grinder. All three grinders are mounted on chassis and tires.

At the peak of work on the Toyota site, Triangle employed the two big tub grinders and six or seven Komatsu PC 200 excavators. Selected excavators were fitted with shears to cut the timber down to a maximum 12-foot length, while other excavators had rake-and-thumb attachments to load the big tub grinders. Most of the 4-inch minus wood material produced from the Toyota site was sold to Weyerhaeuser for use as boiler fuel in a paper-manufacturing plant.

What were the keys to success on the Toyota project? “Production,” Hannon answers—“Putting as much material through those tubs as fast as we possibly could. That’s the big trick. We can average between 150 and 200 tons per hour out of the tub grinders. It depends on the nature of the wood. If you’re running hardwood, your production will be on the low end. But if you run pine, that’s softer, and you can get closer to 400 tons per hour.

“Sizing the material is key. We use shears to size the trees down to 12-foot lengths or less. As for diameter, it’s a 12-foot tub. If you can get it into the tub, the machine will grind it up.”

Advertisement

The HG6000 horizontal grinder keeps busy most of the time at Triangle’s post-consumer recycling center. Commercial tree trimming contractors bring woodwaste, and other sources bring pallets, land-clearing waste, and consumer yardwaste. The center also processes paper, cardboard, plastics, and aluminum and steel cans for recycling.

Triangle Maintenance Service has two divisions. The environmental division handles wastewood recycling, the recycling center, and a rolloff container business. The construction division builds slipformed curb and gutter, exterior concrete pavements, sidewalks, and building foundations. As well, the construction division erects construction signage and finish signage for roadway projects.

Author's Bio: Daniel C. Brown is the owner of TechniComm, a communications business based in Des Plaines, IL.

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 GX Contractor Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our GX Contractor email newsletter!