Skip to main content

Rubble Master in Cyprus

Austrian mobile crusher manufacturer Rubble Master has sold its first machine in Cyprus to Costas Papacostas & Sons, a construction company based in Limassol. After experience gained from demolition projects, handled using hired crushers, the company's managing director Costas Papacostas thought about starting in the recycling business, and invested in a mobile Rubble Master combination consisting of an RM100 impact crusher and TS3600 final double-deck screen.
February 29, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Austrian mobile crusher manufacturer 747 Rubble Master has sold its first machine in Cyprus to Costas Papacostas & Sons, a construction company based in Limassol.

After experience gained from demolition projects, handled using hired crushers, the company's managing director Costas Papacostas thought about starting in the recycling business, and invested in a mobile Rubble Master combination consisting of an RM100 impact crusher and TS3600 final double-deck screen.

The RM100 delivers 200tonnes/hour homogeneous, cubic aggregate from a variety of feed materials with any metal parts being separated from the mineral materials inside the impact crusher and removed by a magnetic separator. The crusher is operated from the loader, and requires one operator because it uses remote control for crushing and manoeuvring operations.

Weighing 28tonnes, the crusher can be transported to any job site without any special transport requirements.

The 15.5tonne Rubble Master TS3600, a crawler gear-mounted double-deck linear oscillation screen, can also handle 200tonnes/hour of material, and is also operated using remote control from the loader.

A recent job handled by the mobile RM100 with TS3600 involved concrete from a demolition project which was crushed down to 0/50mm in the impact crusher, and this was passed directly from the crusher to the screen box of the TS3600 and screened down to two final aggregate sizes: 0/8mm (used for backfilling in utility work) and the 8/32mm coarse grain, which was used as a cover layer in a roadbuilding project. Oversized grain was fed back into the crusher for it to be crushed again.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Recycling materials
    February 6, 2012
    A demolition contractor in the UK is broadening its operations with a new recycled aggregates business.
  • Turkish manufacturers key to aggregates equipment
    February 13, 2012
    Turkish manufacturers are important trading partners in the worldwide aggregate production sector, Mike Woof reports
  • Long life and reliability from innovative crusher
    July 9, 2012
    New technology broadens Sandvik's offering for crushing and screening. Mike Woof reports Sandvik is making a series of upgrades to its crushing and screening line in jaw and cone crushers as well as wear parts, and these should suit an array of applications ranging from small recycling operations up to large quarry sites. At the more versatile end of the range is the new CJ208 jaw crusher, the latest addition to the CJ200 series jaw crusher line-up. This crusher is the smallest of the CJ200 Series and offer
  • Separators boost waste re-use
    June 13, 2012
    A London-based construction material recycling centre says its decision to use a pair of Max X Tract Density Separators is helping them cash in on perceived waste. The 777 Recycling Centre is using the separators supplied by Cheshire-based Dig A Crusher at its state-of-the-art site just outside Croydon. Forming the final stage of 777 Recycling Centre’s resource extraction process, the Waste Systems Ltd-built Max X Tract machines are recovering metals from biomass material while also removing plastics and pa