Manufacturer ListJohn Neuens 414-353-1002 www.bca-industries.comCM Shredders Mario Vazquez 800-848-1071 www.cmshredders.com Eagle International Eco Green Equipment Eldan Recycling Franklin Miller, Inc. Granutech Saturn Systems Komar Industries Inc. M&J Recycling Shred-Tech SSI Shredding Systems, Inc. Untha America Vecoplan LLC Zerma North America
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Slow to decompose and toxic to the environment, rubber is an especially important material to recycle, due to the large volume generated annually. The most common form of this material is tires of various types. The following companies offer products to meet the needs of the rubber recycling market.
Granutech Saturn Systems makes a number of different products that are used in the recycling of rubber. The firm boasts over 50 years of experience in manufacturing size reduction equipment for the recycling industry. “We have primary, dual and single shaft shredders, our Grizzly line of grinders and granulators, as well as our powderizers and G4X Refiner mills. Which product, or combination of products, we would recommend depends on the material that will be processed and the final product size required,” explained Greg Wright, vice president.
He also noted that as there are different types of rubber that are recycled, sometimes the material is a clean product, such as EPDM, or scraps from rubber molded products. Recycling such products is a little easier than recycling something like tires, which require a lot more equipment to clean the steel, fiber, and road contaminants from it.
“One of the top challenges facing equipment suppliers and therefore rubber processors continues to be issues related to supply chain shortages and ever increasing costs.
“Lead times are growing longer and costs are rising. Some small parts that you would never expect to be an issue are now sometimes problematic. Depending on the final product size required, the processing volume of our machines may range from 1,000 lbs. per hour to 20 tons per hour. With the spike in steel prices, transportation costs, and other inflationary pressures; equipment pricing is significantly higher than it was just two years ago. While we place a lot of orders well in advance in an attempt to keep our lead times as short as possible, we also encourage operators to place orders for their consumable parts much sooner in advance, and to consider stocking some on their own too. The high price of oil makes recycling rubber more economical as opposed to virgin rubber. When oil prices soar, technologies like pyrolysis always begin to gain steam again. A majority of the equipment we’ve sold in the last couple of years has been used to make rubber mulch and crumb for sports fields and rubber mats,” Wright concluded.
He continued, “Shred-Tech’s stationary shredders have the torque and strength to easily rip through tires and reduce them into piles of rubber scrap, ready for the next step in processing. Our ST-100, ST-300, ST-400 dual-shaft and STQ-100 four-shaft shredders are equipped with highly durable and powerful knives that ‘bite’ into tires. They can easily handle large loads of the rubber material in a variety of sizes. Our CAMEC CR2A single-shaft stationary shredder, also engineered to handle the heavy duty material, produces a heavy duty throughput of more than 3 tons per hour. Each of these stationary shredders can be installed onto your facility floor so your operation can integrate improved efficiency in tire and rubber waste shredding.”
Published in the August 2022 Edition of American Recycler News