Tag Archive for 'combi-station'

Big Float, Big Idea

We mentioned yesterday that, while we were originally attracted to REMU by their excellent screening bucket range, we (and our customer) had since become increasingly excited by some of the company’s more unusual products like the Combi-Station.

Well, just to prove the point, we have now received a comment on our piece about the Combi Station asking for more details about the other unique product in the REMU range: The Big Float pontoon-mounted excavator.

You can find out more about the specifications of this three-model range by clicking here. But to see the machine in action, just hit the play button, below.

We’d love to hear what you think of this new product so please, Leave a Reply below.

Print This Post Print This Post

Versatile Topsoil Screen

Our new REMU ST Combi is a non-clogging screening plant, first developed to screen mainly topsoil and compost. Thanks to its durable structure, it is now used increasingly in waste, compost, clay, and other sticky materials.

The structure of the Combi is very compact but it still boasts a screening capacity of 300 m³/h. The non-clogging screening element is built to last, even when working with hard and abrasive materials.

The blades are made from steel, not rubber, enabling screening in all weather conditions. Customers can also specify the blade spacing required to achieve the desired particle size. Minimum blade spacing is 20 mm, producing grain sizes of 0-15 mm. The largest grain size that can be produced is 0-100 mm.

Print This Post Print This Post

Competitive Composting

To the man in the street, compost is that heap of grass cuttings and fallen leaves that makes the end of his garden smell bad. But to those in the know, it is one of the fastest-growing and most exciting green business sectors in the world at the moment.

Long used in subsistence farming and home gardening for creating garden-ready soil, composting is becoming increasingly important and better understood as a tool for reducing municipal solid waste, and reducing the amount of green waste going into landfills.

The decomposition of organic material sent to landfills is a principal cause of methane, an important greenhouse gas, making reduction of organic waste being landfilled a key element in the fight against climate change.

Here at Dig A Screener, we are members of the Association for Organics Recycling and are offer a full range of screening buckets and stand-alone plants that are ideally suited to composting applications. In fact, click here to check out this new video of the Remu Combi Station to see what we mean.

Print This Post Print This Post

Remu Combi-Station

When we first took on the Remu range, it’s fair to say that we were primarily interested in their excellent line-up of screening bucket attachments, which we initially sold as our S Series but which are now sold under the Remu name.

However, with the arrival of the new Remu range brochure, we have been amazed as the interest our customers are showing in the Remu combi-station, a dedicated and compact screening plant that is ideally suited to a wide variety of applications including topsoil and composting.

Check out the video of this unit in action below.

You can check out the specs of this exciting new product by downloading the product brochure (click here).

And let us know what you think in the Leave a Reply area, below.

Print This Post Print This Post

REMU Line Brochure

As many of you will be aware, we have been selling and offering for hire the Remu range of screening bucket attachments under the Dig A Screener name for quite some time now.

However, given the growth in Remu’s global reputation, we have now agreed that these products - formerly our S Series - will now be sold under the Remu name.

To help you choose the most appropriate product for your on-site screening needs, Remu have very kindly provided us with a copy of their latest product line brochure, which you can download here:

Remu Range Brochure

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