Monthly Archive for September, 2009

Reinstating Utility Waste

The use of Dig A Crusher and Dig A Screener excavator-mounted crushing and screening buckets is helping Surrey-based stabilised material reinstatement specialists, SMR, to cost-effectively grow its UK network of recycling centres for waste from utility street works.

SMR is pioneering the UK market for premixed reinstatement materials with its ‘Premixd’ solution. This can recover up to 100 per cent of road and pavement spoil and transform it into a high quality product that can outperform traditional materials such as Type GSB aggregates.

Through its sister company, Sustainable Aggregates and a growing number of third party dealers, SMR is establishing a nationwide network of recycling centres. These allow utility companies to avoid landfill charges by tipping their waste for recycling while at the same time collecting SMR Premixd material to reinstate works.

Good spoil management is key to the recycling process with waste needing to be screened and oversized material crushed. This is achieved through the use of Dig A Crusher and Dig A Screener excavator-mounted crushing and screening buckets at a significantly lower capital outlay compared to trommel screens, thereby helping to make local recycling centres more commercially viable. They can also produce screened and crushed material at a much lower cost per tonne.

Being excavator-mounted, the bucket screeners and crushers can easily work in a fraction of the footprint taken by trommel screens and require just one man to operate, which can be any excavator driver.

‘We have been very pleased with the performance of both the Dig A Screeners and Dig A Crushers in terms of their flexibility, speed of processing and reliability,” said SMR managing director, Clive Holloway.

“In any operation like ours, especially for smaller or developing sites, capital outlay is an important consideration, especially as we substantially increase our network of local recycling centres for utility firms and their contractors.”

If you’d like to see this equipment in action, please check out this new video (below):

Print This Post Print This Post

Eradicating Japanese Knotweed

Eight days hire of A Dig A Screener REMU L75 excavator-mounted screening bucket recently provided invasive weed management specialist, Herpetosure Invasive Solutions, with a flexible and cost-effective alternative to a second manned conveyor/screener, when eradicating Japanese Knotweed at a site in Portsmouth.

Japanese Knotweed is recognised by the Environment Agency as one of the UK’s most invasive plant species, with aggressive growth of up to 10cm a day causing extensive damage to buildings, foundations and roads. It spreads through the movement of rhizomes, the shoots that come from the root system.

The weed is regulated by several pieces of legislation, which put a duty of care on the landowner with infestations to be proactive in its control and eradication. This can be achieved in a number of ways, including chemical treatment and excavation, depending on the site and the timescales available.

At the site in Portsmouth over 1,000 tonnes of soil was first screened through the Dig A Screener REMU bucket and then carried via conveyor belt to a manned picking station. The use of the screener bucket dispensed with the need for an extra manned conveyor/screener.

The whole operation is designed to reduce the quantity of soil contaminated with Japanese Knotweed being sent to landfill, with cleaned material placed in a known location on site and monitored by Herpetosure for 12 months.

“The Dig A Screener REMU bucket provides us with a cost-effective and flexible solution when screening spoil,” commented Simon York of Herpetosure Invasive Solutions. “It requires a much smaller footprint than a traditional screener, makes greater use of the excavator on site and can easily be moved from one location to another on the back of a trailer. What’s more it’s ideal for smaller projects and, in some instances, can even do away with the need for a conveyor and manned screening station.”

The WL Series bucket is the perfect machine to screen and mix awkward, wet or sticky materials. The unique narrow bucket design with its straight sides and round blades reduce the risk of clogging to an absolute minimum. The blade design also means oversize objects are repelled rather than crushed, which prevents excess wear, while maximising material screening.

Print This Post Print This Post

Heron’s Heroics Heralded

Dig A Crusher managing director Sean Heron is a pretty modest guy and he has largely chosen to sweep under the carpet his magnificent achievement of cycling from the top to the bottom of his native Ireland.

However, the good people at SED 2010 have rightly chosen to ignore Heron’s modesty, and have plastered his achievements across their newly uploaded website. And since Sean is currently driving and can do nothing about it, we thought we’d share the link with you too.

Click here for further details.

Print This Post Print This Post

Action Speaks Louder

We have been talking for a long time about the various applications in which the REMU range of screening buckets can be used. But check out this video to see what versatility really means:

Print This Post Print This Post

Epic journey complete

As regular readers will know, Dig A Screener managing director has just spent the past seven days cycling from the Northernmost to the Southernmost tip of his native Ireland to raise money for the Marie Curie Cancer Care charity. Saddle sore and weary, Sean has just sent us this message:

I finished the challenge on Friday afternoon when we reached the most southerly point of Ireland after seven tough, enjoyable and fascinating days.
I learned that what Marie Curie do is to care for patients at home when they are dying. Their family want to care for them, but the reality is when they are left on their own it is so exhausting to do this. Then the first thing to go is love. Marie Curie nurses take care of the patents and so allow the family to take care of their loved ones in their final days.
We had some amazing moments during the trip. The best one was the weather. Sunshine and a tail wind all the way. You couldn’t make it up!! Then there was the individuals including Margaret a 55-year old nurse from Waterford but now in Aberdeen who said she hadn’t been on a bike for two months because she didn’t want to injure herself before the trip!!
I also leaned that someone has made the hills in Ireland a lot steeper over the last 20 years because they were a lot harder to get over, especially the hills between Buncrana and Derry. We had early starts with wake up calls at 6.30 and were on the road for 8am. The days were longest on Monday Tuesday and Wednesday when we didn’t finish before 5pm.
But the crack was great. We went as individuals and came away as a group. 41 did it and great friendships were made along the roads. The banter with the locals was brilliant as we were shouting support to all the farmers, walkers and anyone else who gave us a sideways glance along the way!! “Come on the Banner” will ring in my head for a long time as we passed through Clare. I wouldn’t normally put the words “beautiful” and “Strabane” in the same sentence but I was amazed at the views and scenery into the town as we cycled along the wee roads from the Sperrins above.
Overall I am glad to have done it. Sometimes in life you have to give a lot to get a little back. I have just experienced that last week.

Congratulations Sean and to all your fellow riders; what a spectacular achievement.

Print This Post Print This Post

Saddle sore but still talking

Dig A Crusher managing director Sean Heron is now just 24 hours from completing his grueling cycle ride that has taken him from the top to the bottom of is native Ireland.

We have been trying to keep track of his progress but, while Sean is clearly proficient on a bicycle, it’s a bit too much to ask for him to text and ride at the same time. However, we did receive a surprisingly detailed update from Sean late last night:

“…had a tough day with two long, hard climbs this afternoon. Stopped in Bruff this morning and posed for pictures for the local newspaper, the Vale Mail. Got a free pass to Blarney Castle and kissed stone again to recharge effect. Five days gone, two more to go. Roads are getting worse, but pints are tasting better…”

As regular readers will know, Sean has undertaken this 450 mile long mix of altruism and self-inflicted torture for a good cause; the Marie Curie Cancer Care charity. If you would like to support Sean in his noble efforts, please visit his online JustGiving page.

JustGiving sends your donation straight to Marie Curie Cancer Care and automatically reclaims Gift Aid on all eligible donations, so what you give is worth even more.

We wish Sean well for the final stages.

Print This Post Print This Post

On Yer Bike

Dig A Screener managing director Sean Heron is currently in the midst of a charity cycle ride that will take him (and his fellow riders) from the top to the bottom of Ireland over a grueling six-day ride in aid of the Marie Curie Charity.

And, through the wonders of modern technology, we have a photo of Sean leading a breakaway pack as they cross the Foyle Bridge in Derry.

We wish Sean and his fellow fundraisers all the best for their mammoth ride, and promise not to laugh too much at his saddle soreness when he returns to the fray!

Print This Post Print This Post

Recovery Rate Transparency

Waste management contractors and MRF operators working in the construction industry can now offer their clients complete transparency on the recovery rates achieved on their behalf, thanks to an innovative measurement tool being launched by WRAP (Waste & Resources Action Programme).

The freely available Site Specific Waste Analysis Tool (SSWAT) allows waste contractors to track each consignment of construction, demolition and excavation waste processed at their facilities, reporting exactly how - and in what quantities - the materials have been recovered. Historically, it has been rare for operators to offer customer-specific recycling information of this type, relying instead on monthly or quarterly figures based on total throughput.

Click here for further details.

Print This Post Print This Post

Check out our latest video

We have just uploaded a new video to YouTube that shows our screening buckets tackling a mountain of construction and demolition waste for Manchester City Council.

We’re particularly pleased with this video, partly because the site allowed us to show the buckets in real close-up, but also because, for the first time, we’ve managed to capture some of the action from the operator’s point of view.

Take a look and let us know what you think in the Leave a Reply area below.

Print This Post Print This Post

Don’t miss our “tweet-up”

Here at Dig A Screener, we’re just getting ready for our annual trip to Birmingham’s NEC where we will again be taking part in the UK waste and recycling industry’s premier exhibition, RWM 2009.

However, in addition to displaying the very latest additions to both our Dig A Screener and Dig A Crusher product ranges, this year will be slightly different. For the first time, we will be hosting a “tweet-up” for the individuals that follow our news output on the social networking site, Twitter.

So, if you find yourself in Birmingham on 16 September, please swing by our stand (number 126) and be part of our first-ever tweet-up.

And, by the way, the organisers of the RWM Exhibition has just issued a new show preview which you can read by clicking here.

Print This Post Print This Post
Print This Post Print This Post