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Market for recycled materials?
November 6, 2008
3:34 PM
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January 29, 2008
12:18 PM
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Nice stuff cost around 65,000 for a midsize machine crusher bucket.

January 29, 2008
5:41 AM
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Tracked one, but now that you sent me that website with the bucket crushers we might purchase one of those depending on the price.

January 28, 2008
2:01 PM
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What kind of crusher are you looking at -- wheeled, track-mounted, bucket crusher...? If it's manufactured by one of our clients, I'm guessing my boss will want to send me right out! :)

January 23, 2008
7:12 AM
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We are looking at a job now that might require a crusher if we get it you can come do a case study on our demolition project.

January 23, 2008
7:10 AM
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On bigger jobs we have rented agg crushers and sold it instead of having to haul it and pay dump fees. Machines rent for about $25k a month though plus in and out,maintenance. You'll need a lot of concrete to crush up! We just finished a land clearing job and we turned about 45 acres of brush, trees and stumps into mulch using a tg5000.

January 21, 2008
7:49 PM
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January 19, 2008
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It really depends on what part of the country your in. In California, the market is huge. A lot of building contracts will spec out that a certain percentage of recycled concrete must be used in new jobs.

Now for track crushers and screens being the answer....

January 21, 2008
1:24 PM
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January 21, 2008
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we are a small to mid size demo contractor in north carolina and we do our own crushing on site. we are finding that there is a market for crushed concrete and it is getting better with higher agg prices

August 30, 2007
7:59 AM
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mmcaig, I just pm'ed you!:)

August 30, 2007
5:44 AM
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Thanks, James. I'll do that! :)

August 29, 2007
7:13 PM
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The 2 members I would ask would be either Demobud or DallasContracting, I know Dallas started doing on-site C&D a little while ago.

Up here there hasn't been to much legislation, but we all know its coming pretty soon.

August 28, 2007
8:36 AM
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I'm working on an article for a client newsletter -- this is a European manufacturer of track-mounted crushers and screens -- on the U.S. market for this type of equipment. Last fall I did a research project on the North American demolition and C&D recycling markets for this client's parent company.

In talking last fall to Mike Taylor at the NDA, and Bill Turley at CMRA, I was told that a lot of demolition contractors are getting into onsite crushing and screening of materials because it's more cost-effective to recycle materials than it is to dump them, but that a roadblock they're running into is finding an actual market for the recycled material.

For anyone who's doing C&D recycling, is this true, in your experience?

When do you find it's more cost-effective -- and how much of a legislative push is there in your region -- to recycle materials versus landfilling?

I'd appreciate any information you can give -- thanks!

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