Usually, the process carried out for excavations and for other jobs entails the actual excavation, then loading the resulting material onto trucks, transporting it to the nearest dump, unloading it and disposal cost, as well as the return trip of the trucks. The pit then has to be filled in, requiring additional trips to the dump, this time to purchase the same demolition material unloaded just days before, which in the meantime has been crushed and prepared in the size suited to the job of filling in the trenches. Of course, the material must be paid for and hauled to the worksite. With the MB crusher buckets, the job becomes much simpler and less expensive, as all the costs and times relating to the disposal and procurement process are eliminated.
First of all, the material is always directly at the worksite where it is subsequently reused. Generally speaking, the material comes from demolition processes carried out with the help of pliers and jackhammers. Then, the crushing process of this loose debris begins, with the debris then being collected, hoisted, crushed to obtain the desired diameter and unloaded into the bucket. The material thus obtained can now be used for other jobs at the same site, to build yards, road embankments, drainage works and filling in of various excavations. Basically, the MB crusher buckets make it possible for an entire production process to be carried out in the same place, with no need to move materials from one location to the next.
Another example is the laying of special piping in difficult soil. After digging and laying the piping, the trench must be filled in, thus requiring other trips to the dump, this time also to purchase the same material unloaded just a few days before, which in the meantime has been crushed and prepared in the size needed for filling in the trenches. Thanks to the MB crusher buckets, there is less work required, without forgetting another important aspect: the fact that the excavation or trench are filled in using the same material previously excavated means that the nature of the place still consists of the same elements.
