See Us at Scotplant 2010

Dig A Crusher is returning to the Scotplant exhibition at the Royal Highland Centre, Ingliston, Edinburgh (26 & 27 March 2010) with an expanded product line and a stronger-than-ever presence in Scotland.

Appearing on Stand 1, Avenue 11, we will be taking the opportunity to display representative models from each of our Dig A Crusher, Dig A Screener, REMU and Rotar product ranges.   These comprise a comprehensive line-up of excavator-mounted crushing and screening buckets and grabs that are suitable for a wide range of industry sectors including construction, plant hire, demolition and recycling, quarrying, waste management and forestry.

In addition, Scotplant 2010 also provides us with an opportunity for us to introduce our new regional sales manager for Scotland, Brain McGrane.

So, if you’re coming to Scotplant or if you’re likely to be in the Edinburgh area between 26 and 27 March 2010, please be sure to call by to meet Brian and the rest of the Dig A Crusher team, and to see the latest additions to the extensive Dig A Crusher product range.

We look forward to seeing you there.

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Sovereign Goes Back to School

Northamptonshire-based Sovereign Plant has used a Dig A Crusher 700 excavator-mounted crusher bucket to spearhead the extension of one of the UK’s most exclusive boarding schools.   Mounted on a Caterpillar 320 hydraulic excavator, the attachment has been used to process construction and demolition waste, providing valuable recycled materials for the development of Rutland’s Uppingham School.

Located in England’s smallest country, Rutland, Uppingham School is home to some 750 boarders from across the UK and is renowned as the school that invented “all-round education”.

Pupils have access to almost 50 hectares of space, large parts of which are dedicated to theatre, the arts and sports.   Uppingham is also famous as the former school of TV celebrity chef and author Rick Stein.

The school is currently in the midst of a major upgrading as part of a multi-million pound programme to extend its already extensive sports facilities.

As part of that upgrading programme, Sovereign Plant has supplied a Caterpillar 320 hydraulic excavator equipped with a Dig A Crusher 700 screening bucket attachment to process concrete and brick hardcore.

Hired from Dig A Crusher, the unit was used to turn the “waste” rubble and demolition debris into a 40 mm fill product that will be used in the foundations of the extended sports facility.

“We didn’t want to take a dedicated track-mounted crusher or screen into the school grounds because of the noise and disruption it would cause,” concludes Sovereign Plant managing director Terry Bright.   “The Dig A Crusher 700 proved to be a good replacement and allowed us to process material without incurring the cost of removing it from site.”

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See us at AFORS conference

Dig A Crusher is pleased to announce that it will be participating in next month’s Association for Organics Recycling Annual Conference and Awards which takes place at the Hilton Metropole Hotel in Birmingham on 11 February 2010.

With a theme of “Focusing On The Changes In Biowaste”, the event will debate key issues including
carbonmetrics, impact of anaerobic digestion, food waste collections, and legislative issues.   It has also attracted some high profile speakers including:
•    Soil Scientist, Tony Kendle, from the Eden Project;
•    Dr Richard Swannell from WRAP;
•    plus representatives from Viridor, Eunomia, European Compost Network, London Remade Solutions and many more.

To be a part of this event or to see us there, please visit www.organics-recycling.org.uk to register.

We look forward to seeing you there.

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Armoury’s New Weapon

Birmingham-based Armoury Demolition & Recycling Ltd has confirmed its faith in the Dig A Crusher brand by replacing an existing 900 model with a larger, more productive 1200 unit.

Leading National Federation of Demolition Contractors member Armoury has purchased the new 1200 with a Dig A Magnet attachment to help separate and segregate steel reinforcing bar.

Managing director Tony McLean reports that the step up to the 1200 model not only increases productivity but will also widen the scope of recycling work the attachment is able to undertake.

“We run a dedicated, track-mounted crusher but it can cost more than £1,500 just to put that on a site which is just not economical for small-scale crushing operations. However, our original Dig A Crusher 900 overcame that and allowed us to work cost effectively on sites requiring the processing of 500 to 1,500 tonnes of construction and demolition waste,” he says. “But the new 1200 will extend that still further, allowing us to process up to 2,500 tonnes without having to mobilise our larger, more expensive crusher.”

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See us at ScotPlant 2010

It may be six months away but we have already shown our commitment to customers North of the border by signing up for the ScotPlant 2010 exhibition.

The exhibition, Scotland’s premier plant show, is scheduled to take place at the Royal Highland Centre in Edinburgh of 26 & 27 March, and it will provide Scottish customers with a great opportunity to catch up with the latest developments in the Dig A Crusher and Dig A Screener product lines.

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Reinstating Utility Waste

The use of Dig A Crusher and Dig A Screener excavator-mounted crushing and screening buckets is helping Surrey-based stabilised material reinstatement specialists, SMR, to cost-effectively grow its UK network of recycling centres for waste from utility street works.

SMR is pioneering the UK market for premixed reinstatement materials with its ‘Premixd’ solution. This can recover up to 100 per cent of road and pavement spoil and transform it into a high quality product that can outperform traditional materials such as Type GSB aggregates.

Through its sister company, Sustainable Aggregates and a growing number of third party dealers, SMR is establishing a nationwide network of recycling centres. These allow utility companies to avoid landfill charges by tipping their waste for recycling while at the same time collecting SMR Premixd material to reinstate works.

Good spoil management is key to the recycling process with waste needing to be screened and oversized material crushed. This is achieved through the use of Dig A Crusher and Dig A Screener excavator-mounted crushing and screening buckets at a significantly lower capital outlay compared to trommel screens, thereby helping to make local recycling centres more commercially viable. They can also produce screened and crushed material at a much lower cost per tonne.

Being excavator-mounted, the bucket screeners and crushers can easily work in a fraction of the footprint taken by trommel screens and require just one man to operate, which can be any excavator driver.

‘We have been very pleased with the performance of both the Dig A Screeners and Dig A Crushers in terms of their flexibility, speed of processing and reliability,” said SMR managing director, Clive Holloway.

“In any operation like ours, especially for smaller or developing sites, capital outlay is an important consideration, especially as we substantially increase our network of local recycling centres for utility firms and their contractors.”

If you’d like to see this equipment in action, please check out this new video (below):

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Adding Value, Cutting Costs

The ability to produce 6F2 material using a 900 Series Dig A Crusher excavator bucket crusher has dramatically cut the disposal costs of hardcore and fines for a transfer station near the centre of London.

“It’s the best bit of kit we’ve ever bought,” commented Colin Phillips of IOD Skip Hire. “We’ve nearly halved the bill for the removal of fines from site, which has paid for a 22-tonne Doosan excavator that is now dedicated to crushing hardcore.”

Based in Canning Town, London E16, next door to the 2012 Olympic Park, the company serves east London from a two-acre site. On average it processes 1,500 tonnes of waste a week, of which 60 per cent is inert and the balance commercial. Approximately, 70 per cent of all material is recycled.

Because space is limited, the company finds it difficult to store hardcore and fines from screened C&D waste. Therefore, it has to have them removed from site either free-of-charge or, in the case of the fines, at considerable cost.

“With the Dig A Crusher bucket attachment we are now able to reduce our hardcore down to 50mm and mix it with fines to produce a certified 6F2 general fill/capping material, which is then supplied to contractors for sub-surface work,” explained Colin.

“As space is at a premium, the excavator/attachment arrangement is ideal because it has such a small footprint and as the crusher bucket can be easily detached, we also have the option of using the excavator on other jobs.”

The company acquired a 900 Series Dig A Crusher, which has a 0.75m2 capacity, two years ago after seeing a demonstration at a nearby construction site in Barking.

An added bonus has been the reliability of the bucket. As Colin pointed out: “There’s really nothing to service and besides general wear and tear, quality has not been an issue.”

To see the Dig A Crusher 900 in action at IOD Skip Hire, please check out the video below:

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Heron’s Heroics Heralded

Dig A Crusher managing director Sean Heron is a pretty modest guy and he has largely chosen to sweep under the carpet his magnificent achievement of cycling from the top to the bottom of his native Ireland.

However, the good people at SED 2010 have rightly chosen to ignore Heron’s modesty, and have plastered his achievements across their newly uploaded website. And since Sean is currently driving and can do nothing about it, we thought we’d share the link with you too.

Click here for further details.

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Epic Journey Complete

As regular readers will know, Dig A Crusher managing director has just spent the past seven days cycling from the Northernmost to the Southernmost tip of his native Ireland to raise money for the Marie Curie Cancer Care charity. Saddle sore and weary, Sean has just sent us this message:

I finished the challenge on Friday afternoon when we reached the most southerly point of Ireland after seven tough, enjoyable and fascinating days.
I learned that what Marie Curie do is to care for patients at home when they are dying. Their family want to care for them, but the reality is when they are left on their own it is so exhausting to do this. Then the first thing to go is love. Marie Curie nurses take care of the patents and so allow the family to take care of their loved ones in their final days.
We had some amazing moments during the trip. The best one was the weather. Sunshine and a tail wind all the way. You couldn’t make it up!! Then there was the individuals including Margaret a 55-year old nurse from Waterford but now in Aberdeen who said she hadn’t been on a bike for two months because she didn’t want to injure herself before the trip!!
I also leaned that someone has made the hills in Ireland a lot steeper over the last 20 years because they were a lot harder to get over, especially the hills between Buncrana and Derry. We had early starts with wake up calls at 6.30 and were on the road for 8am. The days were longest on Monday Tuesday and Wednesday when we didn’t finish before 5pm.
But the crack was great. We went as individuals and came away as a group. 41 did it and great friendships were made along the roads. The banter with the locals was brilliant as we were shouting support to all the farmers, walkers and anyone else who gave us a sideways glance along the way!! “Come on the Banner” will ring in my head for a long time as we passed through Clare. I wouldn’t normally put the words “beautiful” and “Strabane” in the same sentence but I was amazed at the views and scenery into the town as we cycled along the wee roads from the Sperrins above.
Overall I am glad to have done it. Sometimes in life you have to give a lot to get a little back. I have just experienced that last week.

Congratulations Sean and to all your fellow riders; what a spectacular achievement.

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Saddle sore but still talking

Dig A Crusher managing director Sean Heron is now just 24 hours from completing his grueling cycle ride that has taken him from the top to the bottom of is native Ireland.

We have been trying to keep track of his progress but, while Sean is clearly proficient on a bicycle, it’s a bit too much to ask for him to text and ride at the same time. However, we did receive a surprisingly detailed update from Sean late last night:

“…had a tough day with two long, hard climbs this afternoon. Stopped in Bruff this morning and posed for pictures for the local newspaper, the Vale Mail. Got a free pass to Blarney Castle and kissed stone again to recharge effect. Five days gone, two more to go. Roads are getting worse, but pints are tasting better…”

As regular readers will know, Sean has undertaken this 450 mile long mix of altruism and self-inflicted torture for a good cause; the Marie Curie Cancer Care charity. If you would like to support Sean in his noble efforts, please visit his online JustGiving page.

JustGiving sends your donation straight to Marie Curie Cancer Care and automatically reclaims Gift Aid on all eligible donations, so what you give is worth even more.

We wish Sean well for the final stages.

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