Manufacturing Industry
Pick-up artists: selecting the right scrap handling attachments for a scrap yard depends on the materials handled
Recycling Today, June, 2004 by Deanne Toto
With the variety of scrap handling attachments available, selecting the proper combination of tools to service a yard may not be as straightforward as choosing between a grapple and a lifting magnet. In addition to the time-honored lifting magnet, a variety of grapples are available--from orange peel to tulip to narrow tine--as are magnet/grapple combinations.
Mike Schwebke of Joseph Behr & Sons Inc., Rockford, Ill., suggests determining a yard's material handling needs prior to selecting the attachments to outfit a scrap handler. If he were going into business today, Schwebke says, he would employ hydraulic cranes outfitted with combination magnet/grapple attachments, which he likes because of their versatility. Behr currently operates four or five cranes outfitted with magnet/ grapple combinations.
"You can sort as well as grab nonferrous material and sort unshreddables out of white goods," he says of the magnet/ grapple combinations. "There are trade-offs, but for the most part, it works pretty well."
Schwebke says adding a magnet to a grapple causes the grapple to lose from half a yard to three quarters of a yard in capacity. Additionally, a magnet/grapple combination is incapable of 360-degree rotation because of interference from the wiring for the magnet, he says.
"The magnet has its place 25 percent of the time in this business," Schwebke says, "but the grapple has definitely taken over the business."
GETTING A LIFT. Behr uses its magnets for cleaning up behind the grapple and for feeding one of its shears unprepared plate material.
However, at Midland-Davis in Moline, Ill., the magnets are the workhorses of the yard. "We don't have any grapples," the company's Mitchell Davis says. "We have lattice boom cranes. We don't have a crane with a shear on the end or hydraulic knuckle booms with grapples. We don't do autos."
Davis says that 90 percent of the company's incoming material arrives in roll-off containers and is dumped in the yard. "We use it for moving material, loading, sorting, picking and cleaning up the roadways," he says.
Jed Morris of Morris Recycling Inc. (MRI), New Albany, Miss., says that magnets are best suited for handling "small, dense scrap that lays close together."
Depending on the yard, MRI may switch between grapples and magnets. "In operations where we only have one crane, we tend to swap," Morris says. "In operations where we have multiple cranes, we typically have at least one unit that is interchangeable. On a scrap handler, a magnet just does not mow enough scrap except in very specific applications where ii is a necessity," he says.
While lifting magnets are not capable of the versatility that grapples provide, they require little maintenance and can often provide decades of service.
"Magnets, if you take care of them and don't use them as battering rams or to break cast or anything like that--which, unfortunately, some people do--about the only thing you'll have to do is periodically fix the electrical connectors, Davis says.
Morris also stresses the need for training staff on the proper operation of lifting magnets. "The biggest thing maintenance can do is help inform operators on the proper operational care," he says. "Magnets are insulated coils that when run at too high of a duty cycle can become hot, deteriorating the insulation and causing a short. Making sure the operator only turns the magnet on after it is in the pile or otherwise touching the scrap will extend the life of the magnet and improve the efficiency of the unit," Morris says. "Otherwise, a magnet is not a battering ram and does not need to be used to break or beat against anything." He adds, "In some instances over a lot of tons, you may have to build up or replace wear surfaces."
Schwebke says that the magnets' chains and pins will occasionally need to be replaced. "We may go through a set of chains and pins in eight months." He says that Behr has had magnets in service for 25 years and has only had about three repaired for dead shorts.
While grapples require more maintenance than lifting magnets, they are the preferred scrap-handling tools at Behr's yards.
NIMBLE FINGERS. "I'd say 75 percent of out work in our yard is done with grapples," Schwebke says. "We actually handle all of our inbound, unprepared material, which is the bulky material, like combines and farm equipment and that kind of thing. Feeding our other shear with this kind of material with a magnet/grapple combination works out pretty well."
He continues "We get a lot of machines in that weigh probably 20 tons. Years ago, we used to rig all of that with chains and manpower. Now we have a big enough grapple that we get a hold of these things and unload them within minutes."
Schwebke says grapples are "Faster and more efficient by far" when compared to magnets.
While Randy Katz of City Scrap Co., Akron, says the yard uses magnets to load outbound trucks, grapples are used to feed the yard's shredders. "You could never pick up an auto with a magnet," he says. "A grapple picks up material beautifully."
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