* Lindemann American Baler
Lindemann American Baler of Telford, U.K., has recently installed a Bimax 145 baling press at Grosvenor Waste Management of Crayford in Kent. The press will be used to process approximately 2500 tonnes of paper a week, as well as aluminium cans and plastic bottles, and will work alongside the company’s other two Lindemann presses. Grosvenor Waste Management is an independent company specialising in the servicing of industrial and commercial premises for the collection of recyclable materials for sorting and processing. The company operates from sites at Crayford and Wolverhampton.
www.lindemannamericanbaler.com
* MBH Bronneberg & Jegerings
Dutch recycling equipment supplier MBH Bronneberg & Jegerings has sold two of its latest-design static 1000 tonne guillotine shears with 7 metre box – one to The Netherlands and the other to South America.
Bronneberg has also delivered a mobile shear baler to the island of Aruba, one of the Dutch Antilles in the Caribbean. In addition, a new stationary 650 shear is in production for delivery to a Belgian company in August and, this month, a new high-speed aluminium baler with a 3000 x 1400 mm box producing 40 x 40 bales will be delivered to a customer in The Netherlands.
MBH Bronneberg & Jegerings has re-designed its mobile Super II lid baler with 1600 x 1000 mm box, the first of these models having been sold to Hungary. Finally, two MBH car flatteners will soon leave the factory for a customer in the Caribbean.
www.bronneberg.com
* Bulk Handling Systems.
Bulk Handling Systems (BHS) of Eugene, Oregon, U.S., has supplied what is claimed to be the world’€™s largest OCC separator to Metropolitan Paper in Brooklyn, New York. Designed for the mechanical separation of corrugated containers from mixed paper and other miscellaneous waste, the screen was sized to process 40 to 50 short tons per hour of incoming material.
In addition, BHS has installed two single-stream processing facilities on the U.S. West Coast: Oregon Recycling Systems of Portland, Oregon, and West County Resource Recovery of Richmond, California, are currently processing 15 and 20 tonnes per hour respectively. Both systems incorporate screens for the mechanical separation of cardboard, newsprint, mixed paper and fines. They are yielding clean, negatively-sorted fibre and a significant reduction in labour costs.
www.bulkhandlingsystems.com.
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