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Mud
Cat™ is a registered trademark
of Baltimore Dredges LLC
Dredges ______________________Home of the One-Truck Transportable Dredge __________________________The Original Auger Dredge Manufacturer |
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Sludge Removal Problems Solved Successfully Solution
The contractor's portable hydraulic dredge, a Mud Cat™ SP-915, removed bottom deposits, 3 to 4 feet thick, consisting of solids from equipment washdowns plus sand and dirt pumped in with river water used to replace water lost in evaporation-type cooling. By specification, removal operations were conducted while the reservoir and all manufacturing operations continued to function. At work, the Mud Cat'sT auger-type cutting head mechanically moved a slurry of water and sediment through a self-contained trash pump and a floating pipeline. Its working path was controlled by a winch system that guided the rig along a cable successively moved to closely-spaced shore anchor points located at the opposite sides of the 180' x 1000' concrete-lined reservoir. A controlled flow of 800 gpm ended up in two ground-based portable tanks, each 21,000 gallons in capacity, which acted as surge storage facilities between the dredging and dewatering operations. Within the tanks, mixers rotated non-stop to homogenize the mix and keep the particles in suspension, ensuring a consistent feed to the trailer-mounted twin-belt filter presses. Four of these portable units did the dewatering, the number having been selected to match dredge capacity and the desired production schedule. Sludge pumps on each press were set to draw the volume required to keep output to an optimum level. Each 2.5 meter press was capable of handling up to 200 gpm. Input was adjusted through a manifold to match the varying incoming sludge percentages. A granular organic water treatment polymer was fed in from four 500-gallon tanks; the additive conditioned and flocculated the sediment. From here, the mixture was channeled between sets of porous filter belts under increasing pressures applied by a series of rollers. This pressure forced out almost all the free water, producing a sludge cake more than half solids that was conveyed to a chute for deposit onto a ground-level staging area. The material was then loaded by a small conventional tractor shovel into dump trucks and removal accomplished by hauling the material through plant property and over state highways to disposal at a plant-owned state-approved industrial landfill. Mobilization was completed within five working days of the starting date, and reservoir cleaning was completed 70 working days later. The schedule was attained as planned by working one 10-hour shift per day, six days per week. Demobilization was completed within six working days after the reservoir was cleaned. Results Reprinted from The National Environmental Journal |
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Mud
Cat™ Division
1750 Madison Avenue
New Richmond, Wisconsin, USA 54017
Email: info@mudcat.com
Phone: 715-246-2888
Toll free in USA: 800-243-1406
Fax: 715-246-2573
© Copyright 2002-2008
Ellicott Dredges, LLC