The Optimum Stationary Waste Wood Shredder
That is the shredder Polaris 2800, of that Wurzer Umwelt GmbH is certain.
The Wurzer Group has been relying on Lindner’s shredding technology for over ten years and has been successfully using the manufacturer's Polaris 2800 in waste wood processing for over a year now. The result: few fines in the output, the highest throughput with the best machine availability – consistent, reliable and safe.
Eitting/Spittal an der Drau. Today Wurzer Umwelt GmbH is part of Eittinger’s timber industry tradition. The processing of waste wood of the grades A1 to A4* is one of the backbones in the manifold business activities of waste management and recycling. ‘Wurzer successfully entered this segment 25 years ago,’ says Hans Kenst, Signing Officer and Operations Manager who has been with the company since 1997. ‘We have been continuously expanding our processing capacities, including the construction of a large hall for the dry storage of A4 wood. In the last three or four years, the total quantity of waste wood processed has increased from around 30,000 to around 100,000 metric tons per year.’ Kenst sees further potential for development in this dynamically growing market.
To cope with higher waste wood quantities, the processing line was updated in May 2018 with an older machine from another supplier being replaced by the Polaris 2800. Wurzer Umwelt's experience has shown that the Lindner shredder is the ideal machine for maximum throughput with low fine particle content in the output to satisfy buyers’ quality requirements. Compared to similar single-shaft shredders on the market, the Polaris machine series has the lowest production costs per metric ton of finished material (€/t) – as proven by a study from the Austrian University of Leoben and confirmed by its users.
Hans Kenst is also pleased with the electric drive’s energy efficiency. From an engineering perspective, the Signing Officer and Operations Manager at Wurzer Umwelt is particularly impressed by the enormous force that the Polaris exerts with its countershaft drive and, last but not least, by the shredder’s signature resistance to non-shreddables. Kenst recalls long downtimes: ‘The predecessor was more susceptible to foreign objects and sometimes non-shreddables in the feed caused repair work that meant it was down for two whole days.’ With the Polaris from Lindner, this problem has been solved.
The roughly pre-crushed input material may still contain screws, nails, hinges and other metal parts which the upstream over-belt magnet has not picked up and removed from the material flow. The Lindner shredder is not bothered by these non-shreddables. Hans Kenst appreciates the Polaris’ ‘good behaviour’: ‘The safety clutch prevents machine damage even from large chunks of rock and massive metal parts which the over-belt magnet has not detected and removed. It comes to a standstill immediately, the non-shreddables are quickly removed via the hydraulic maintenance door and the machine is back up and running in no time.’