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

A smaller machine can be a smart choice when it comes to a crusher for onsite demolition debris. Today’s smaller crushers make it cost-effective to move into a demolition site, crush the concrete and asphalt, and either reuse the material onsite or haul it away. Onsite crushing saves trucking costs, tipping fees at the landfill, and labor expenses.

“Smaller crushers are more versatile and profitable, especially for demolition contractors,” says Nikolaus Hottenroth, business development manager for Rubble Master Systems Inc., a crusher manufacturer that makes compact machines. “We see a tendency toward smaller machines. I realized it at Conexpo 2008 when people came to our booth and asked for smaller crushers.”

As evidence of that trend, Rubble Master’s sales have doubled every year over the past three years. In 2008, sales of crushers reached in the area of 40 units, he says. “It’s mainly because of the economics of onsite crushing,” notes Hottenroth. “Onsite crushing eliminates a lot of trucking, which saves fuel, labor and insurance.”

At Telsmith Inc., another crusher manufacturer, marketing manager Jim Schreiner says there’s been an evolution toward smaller machines. Within the last 10 years, he says, the industry started building smaller track-mounted units—mostly jaw crushers. “More recently, in the past five years, they put impact crushers on tracks as well,” says Schreiner. (Jaw crushers use compression to crush rock or concrete. Impact crushers, or [ITALIC]impactors[ITALIC], either hit material with a hammer or throw it against a hard surface.)

Advertisement

“Demolition material is a different animal from natural stone,” says Schreiner. “If you use a portable crusher, you need an excavator with an attachment to munch it up. You need to prepare the material before you put it in the plant.”

Schreiner says an impact crusher will make a higher percentage of material 2.5 inches or smaller than will a jaw crusher. But an impact crusher will carry a higher maintenance cost. With a jaw crusher, just the opposite is true—larger end product, lower maintenance costs. 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 GX Contractor Email Updates!

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