Sandvik Concrete Recycling setup

Published 2018-05-23

All Comments (21)
  • Excellent video. Great angles. Really shows the entire operation. Makes me appreciate this industry even more. Thanks Brenden.
  • @DaleDirt
    My compliments to the video footage on this video , it was excellent and nothing short of amazing . Who ever did this was a pro and knew what they were looking for .
  • @W96NZ
    Great seeing other companies do the samething we do at my company. Gotta say you do a great job recording. Would never guess it was recorded on a phone.
  • @1konNOS1
    Well that is recycling with all the meaning!! Awesome!!
  • @dimidomo7946
    Nice video...kept my interest. Sandvik, a global company that is well positioned and makes tons of money.
  • @BakoelGendoel
    Excellent upload. Full watched and have a wonderful day...
  • The asmr in this video.. oh my god. I enjoyed every second of it.
  • @KevinPolin
    Thanks for sharing... this is really cool to watch.
  • @naufalbluu
    From rough to smooth, this technology is very sophisticated
  • @shoukatali7870
    Great job be machine and men I really like it. From U.K.
  • @tbonemc2118
    This is really just a reasonable sized mobile plant in use because it's probably close to the source concrete and to the buyer. There are permanent crusher operations that make this look like a toy. I have no idea on how to find it now but there was a video of one operation that was virtually automatic apart from trucks feeding the plant and buyers trucking away the finished product. Trucks would dump directly into a hopper that fed the crushing process and at the end of the line there were massive silos for want of a better name filled with the various grades of material that loaded directly into their customers trucks.
  • @gregoryrush4056
    Truly impressive; curious about the durability and maintenance schedule required after a couple of years of operations. Like, frequency of main bearing replacements for the jaw crusher unit? That often seems to be a key point of wear in these devices. A really well appreciated and most likely profitable favor to the demolition industry would be to invent a rock and concrete crushing system that was more appropriately scaled and costed to job-site operations; the size where the throughput needed from the crushing system is not measured in multiple tons per hour; more like 1/2 to 1 ton per hour. Instead of having to pay for hauling castoff rock & concrete to commercial operations, contractors could process the material into forms useful on the jobsite, or possible to be sold to other parties. This would also cut down on them simply calling up people to dump the material "anywhere we can't see it", which in many locales has been and still is a growing problem. Not only would this open up new sales/leasing/rental business for the machinery, but would have immediate impact with environmental concerns over the swiftly growing number and volumes of illegal construction materials dumpsites.
  • I've seen this process done with a single machine. It had three exit conveyors for three sizes of gravel. The operators told me that the gravel was already contracted and would probably be new roadbed or poured into new concrete within a week. Pretty cool.
  • @MrOner07
    cute little fancy working machine.thanks for the video