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In 2011, I was living in Joplin Missouri. We had an F5 tornado come through town that destroyed hundreds of homes and hundreds more with roof damage. The landfills in the area were overwhelmed with all the debris. So the decision was made to recycle all of the roof shingles into all of the asphalt needed to repair the city street. The city saved thousands of dollars and the streets are fine.
I was living in Lebanon Missouri when that tornado hit. I was working at Lowe Boats and a few us working there went down to help, the devastation was heart breaking.
I remember many many years back (early 90s?) when we got the first German asphalt grinders (Wirtgen, vielleicht) here in Finland, and it was called an expensive but good investment. Nowadays almost all asphalt is recycled here.
we limit recycled asphalt (RAP) to 15%.... Caltrans allows up to 25%. This video is biased/lying when it says "regulators limit"..... engineers limit it for good reason... - source: i'm an engineer....
@@Sam-qg1dy With the proper tech you can use a lot more than 25%: I'm not happy with 100% recycled either, but 90% can be done without drawbacks. We have tests streets from >30 years ago and so far it has the same degradation as new pavement. Currently working on a mobile recycling plant that can be set up close to the construction site. Because when the repavement starts, you need A LOT of trucks the get the stuff quick enough...
The reason you can recycle metal is because metal grows very fast. Those tiny crystals grow immediately below melting point and it reverts back to order, to solid ... after you grind it to a powder and melt it. Now try the same with polymer chains. Bitumen or plastic or whatever. Polymer chains don't just grow back when going below melting point. They need very specific conditions to grow and you cannot recycle plastic or asphalt like you can recycle metal. The recycled material suffers partial degradation and the degraded chains cannot be separated and they contaminate the material and change it's properties. To lower the contamination level and mantain material quality, virgin material has to be added to the mix. It will NEVER work without adding virgin material
@@georgeyoutube7580 Did you watch the video? The fact is people ARE recycling asphalt. So the question of whether it can be done is moot at this point. As for plastic, that's a very broad term for a range of products. Some of which are 100% reusable, like PE, PET, PP, PS, PLA, etc.. I've been recycling HDPE at home for years, and we're starting to see consumer grade recycling equipment become more widely available. The plastics that can't be reused, you can use pyrolysis to turn them back into flammable substances for other uses. The word recycling covers a lot of options and I feel you're limiting your thoughts to simply reusing products, but any process that creates a new product from an old one is recycling.
@@M3rVsT4H well i worked in plastic industry. And you can recycle anything if you use broad terms. We managed to recycle biodegradable plastic. The client wanted to recycle the waste his factory produced. It can work to some extent but it doesn't really work cos the more recycled material you add to the mix, the more waste you make cos the final product start to fail and be non compliant in strenght and elasticity mostly. Sure, you can find another product to dump the recycled material, another technological process and you can recycle. But recycling asphalt to asphalt does not work without adding large amounts of virgin material. And it's stupid to try cos you compromise durability then you just doubled the amount of material you need to dump if the road lasts half as long
@@georgeyoutube7580 I think as more people use it for more things, the term recycling is becoming broader. We will likely see increased use of more specific terms like reused, upcycled.. etc. I'm no chemical engineer but my own thermoplastic recycling has been successful. And I've seen the pyrolysis work. But as you say, it depends how you want to define it. Obviously one must factor in consumables used in the process etc. If this video presentation is to be believed, this company is 100% recycling asphalt, and the only virgin material added was the Paraffin used in the process. And if they've been laying it for 11 years, there should have been ample time to measure the product's performance.
Our residential development had its dirt road paved with recycled asphalt 18 years ago. It endured countless frost heaving, snow plowing & grader truck in winter, and heavy machinery traffic as the development expanded over the years. It’s still in really good shape.
@@kevinbutton4580 Recycle shouldn't play a factor in how long a road will last if its done properly. The liquid does age but can be chemically restored back to its original state. I doubt your roads are 100% recycled anyways. Most plants do like 20 - 30%. NYS DOT wont let you exceed 20% for any state roads or state funded projects.
That's the problem with asphalt in general, it looks all the same on the outside, but to characterize the binder's actual quality, we run performance based tests using machines like a Dynamic Shear Rheometer and Bending Beam Rheometer. 100% RAP can be used for parking lots and low volume roads, but wouldn't be suitable for highways since it has less relaxation capabilities than its virgin counterparts, and would pothole and fail faster than a traditional counterpart.
@@jainradhakrishnan6600 Theres so many rejuvenators and additives available today to fix that though. I feel like the term recycled asphalt is kind of vague for the discussion too. We talking 100% recycled or just because it had 20% RAP or RAS its considered recycled asphalt?
@@koralr33fer79 True. At the moment, 100% recycled or reclaimed or shingled (RAP, RAS, etc) asphalt means no new virgin aggregate in the mix, and possibly no new asphalt binder. To call a mix "100% Recycled", the only "new" thing should/would be the recycling agents added to rejuvenate the existing RAP/RAS binder. This is probably up for debate at different DOTs.
I was thinking the exact same thing. It should be Mandatory, otherwise out of a purely monetary concern, they will tax the healthcare system in years to come. Probably non union
Even if your worried about recycled asphalt not being as good, why not use it on private drives and access roads that are used far less? I know in California there are a ton of roads in hills and mountains going to various installations that would benefit from recycled asphalt. What about making some VERY needed bike paths? That would be awesome.
Germany is again ahead of its time: 80% of all asphalt is recycled, and we have 660 of these recycling facilities around the nation. Apparently, they also already have mobile recycling devices, which recycle and reuse the asphalt on the spot. Very cool!
Yes, here in Canada we are at least 15-20 years behind. Then when we do come around it's treated like it's a brilliant idea and wonder why it took us so long to think of it...meanwhile the rest of the world moves on, and our stoner PM continues to get stoned.
90% of asphalt is recycled in the US, but 30% is the standard for new mixes. Usually the aggregates are crushed and reused as granular material (the sub-base of the road). Same happens with concrete.
@@Mr.SisterFisster I'm not arguing about the PM, but things aren't always as simple as they sound. This whole video is a one sided "commercial" for this "green paver" guy. Fact is, I'm fine with recycled, but in Hamilton Ontario they paved the Red Hill Expressway with some sort of "inferior" asphalt that has slightly less grip than what's normally specified. Two pretty teenage girls died one day (couldn't possibly have been driver error!) so suddenly there's billions spent to blame someone and repave etc. You wonder why things don't change too quickly around here? Who's going to put their name/career/professional status/company/personal wealth on the line to say "it's just as safe as new asphalt".
In a place like New York, the roads are always being torn up, they said so, so you don't even NEED the asphalt to be durable be ouse its gonna get milled in 5 or six years tops.
Millings in the UK are recycled. Just a few years ago you could get as much millings as you wanted for free to make gravel roads , now it's worth money.
Many years ago, I was in Boston (MA). During the Dukakis era. I witnessed road gangs ripping freeways during the night, and relaying them immediately. Only one lane of the multi-lane freeway was closed as the whole 'wagon train' 1/4 mile long, of machinery rolled on slowly. Brilliant. In the intervening 45 years I have never seen it done anywhere elsewhere !
I remember reading where some states use old car tires, grind them up, and mix with the asphalt. This reduces the tires in the landfill, but also cuts down on asphalt material and the roads last a lot better. The only downfall is because the roads can last longer, it is less maintenance, and thus less work for the employees.
Yes, and that’s generally the city or state workers. What does that mean? Less cost, lower maintenance and therefore less ‘government UNION’ members and less union money to the democrats. Can’t have that.
This mix you are talking about is terrible. It would stick to the insides of the paver. Rollers would pick up because the rubber was so thick within this mix design. It would take 2 hours to clean out the paver verses 30 minutes. It’s sounds great, but in reality it will take some more development.
Less maintenance is a downside? Maybe they can repair some roads OTHER than the main thoroughfares. You'll never run out of shitty old roads that haven't been repaved in 10+ years.
Maybe some 20 years ago I saw a machine in Norway that was digging up the asphalt of a road in the front, heating it up and laying it back down in the rear of the machine. Absolutely awesome. In Norway there is so much snow, that cars have winter tires with spikes, which tear up the road. They use these machines only during the night, because they move very slowly and cause a horrific traffic jam. Type "Hot In-place Asphalt Recycling"
Bomag has been making machines for decades that grind up the old asphalt road in front of it, and recycles the materials and lays the new road out behind it but it is very slow, and costy
This seems like a solid win/win. Wishing them all the best. Now we need someone to go commercial with a process to repurpose composite waste into concrete reinforcement.
There’s a company in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan that uses a poly gator bar made from composite materials that gets used in curb reinforcement. Not allowed in anything else as it hasn’t had enough time in projects to show a failure rate.
If 90% is already being recycle, thats good enough in my book. Getting that last 10% is difficult and will take a lot more money and resources that are probably better spent elsewhere.
According to the video most asphalt 30% max and it’s 20% cheaper. 90% of the leftover asphalt is reused in roads but 30% of the new road is recycled . Meaning there are large piles of asphalt building up AND new mining occurs. That’s the whole issue.
@@ripprind it's simple. It doesn't say a new road is 90% recycled. It says 30% of a new road is recycled asphalt. new, additional roads are being built. 90% of the trashphalt is eventually reused. So the 10% is growing (because there are always more roads,which need maintaining) but mining, which is overall worse, continues. When I read above comment, I was confused at first too.
@@somerandofilipino6957 it is being used. But the 10% is getting bigger. Stop mining and the 10% will disappear. That's this companies entire argument.
08:58 the black pavement absorbs heat - while recycling asphalt, can additives be used to lighten its color to grey? can this be done without impacting asphalt quality?
@@dhequipmentltd Are there additives that can make the road "white" to the infrared and ultraviolet spectra, where people can't see it, so that the road can still look black, but reflect a significant portion of the sun's light?
Some areas of some US States use aggregate that's either high in iron or is crushed lava 'cinder' rock, giving the asphalt a dark red color, sort of like red velvet chocolate cake.
My 350 foot driveway is made from millings. Fresh from a ground up road and parking lot and dumped here. Spread it out and its solid as a rock. Not as good as spreading a hot mix but damn good. Recycling it back to hot mix is no different than making it new. It should all be recycled.
the private contractors the city I work for have multi million dollar machines that already recycle the road they tear up and remix it with fresh tack and pave it all in a single pass, its quite an amazing material.
As well I have Observed that the colour of the ??tar laid down before applying the new asphalt is different! Now adays is a brown in colour not the black of 40+ yrs ago!
@@edwardcarberry1095 Odd I haven't seem brown asphalt where we get our supply. If we get a load that is brown we consider it a contaminated load with too much dirt and not enough oil in it and send it back for a better load.
The brown what ever shade they call that which is sprayed on the old ashpault which is then covered. It used to be sprayed just before it was covered, not now have seen it sit over night before it is covered.
@@edwardcarberry1095 yeah the new tack as we call it is a brown color now and has a sweet smell to it. its water based if I remember and is a bit cheaper but just as effective. that is used to seal the pavement below the fresh asphalt that is paved down.
Love your video great idea love every bit of it I hauled asphalt cement for 30 years and always wondered why it couldn't be recycled 100% and you're right even in Canada they only use 30% our roads are deteriorating so bad in North America and why aren't they doing this now I've seen machines that are recycling the roads which is awesome why isn't that also being done thank you for your video love it
Another really great video! I know another large hurdle in the US is regulatory -- most states have an upper limit set for what percent of highway pavement can be recycled (either from pavement or shingles). I'm curious if anyone knows what other uses there are for the crude oil fractions that would be replaced by green bitumen -- if we don't use those fractions (side products from fuel distillation) for bitumen, where does they go? Are there other uses that are also recyclable?
It's not regulatory, it's specification e.g. quality. What's not being mentioned is that rap is of a lower quality then virgin. Old bitumen is more oxidised so it's lower quality then virgin as more of the oils in the binder make it flexable are gone. So you still need to add new binder. What's also not mentioned is the crushing of the rap makes the stone portions smaller so it's not optimal for large stone size mixes. Finally you can't heat it to the same tempature as the bitumen in the rap oxidises as it goes through the burner if it's hoter then 180degree c. So yes you can recycle it but not at 100% for main roads etc. It's also normally a pig to hand work so not great for small jobs either
@@nimrodbegg123 They do mention it's not the same quality, it's why they add the paraffin oil. I'll bet not much of the stone gets broken in the process, it's the strongest part of the mix- not to mention they sort the stone size so they can make the final mix with the proper proportions. 180 deg isn't the limit as they heat it to 300 degrees. Did you watch the video or just reporting your 'expertise' on how recycled asphalt 'isn't good'? 'Experts' have so much difficulty with change, they 'already know it all'.
@@troyclayton I watched the video, and what they are making is exactly what we made in Melbourne and Adelaide for doing carparks and paver laid footpaths. It is not main roads spec, though at least in Aussie we were laying and making all the way up to 70 percent recycled mixes to go to subdivisions and council roads where they where willing to accept quality sacrifice's. State highways really wouldn't go beyond 30 percent due to aged binder concerns. Also adding volitiles to the mix rather then the binder has issues, as it's lower softening point can negatively impact the life of the mix, and it's reslience The crushers do smash stone as that what they are meant to do, and the rap comes from profilers that normally pulverise the pavement to shoot it into trucks. 7 years of playing with asphalt mix and asphalt plants teaches you a wee bit about. 100 percent was something we could do but the quality issues on a product you had to warranty was a issue Also some countries use units that actually make sense and bitumen as a whole tends to oxidise at or near 180 degree c
3:45 a bigger roof cover and led light focused on the conveyor line, will help keep the worker cool and increase his productivity.. Piss me off that business took workers well-being for granted
@2:25 Its not just big cities that do this. Even in my small town, a main route (approximately one mile)to the densest shopping area was repaved. The next week, the municipal water and sewer department cut a zigzag trench to repair the system. All the manhole covers, which are apparently required to be placed in the tire track of the lane, were five inches lower than the new road. Yes, the put in new manhole trunks that were shorter than the ones they were replacing. 30 days later, after the uproar from residents of all the towns that have to use that specific road to get to shopping, the town had to repave the entire road.
4:58 You can't say it green asphalt. It's "green washing" bcz asphalt is not green anyway. But it's better than traditional asphalt. We should say it clearly 50% green asphalt or half green or something. Still material engineers have responsibility in finding green road materials other than asphalt.
Asphalt is effectively made from waste products of the petroleum industry.... So reducing our use won't really reduce production. Plus the carbon remains trapped if it's on the road or capping a landfill. As we decarbon our world (assuming that ever happens) reusing asphalt makes more and more sense, but it's not fixing a problem per se.
Yes asphalt is not a problem. It is just good use of the waste of oil refining. The main problem is the abuse of the oil itself for fuels. The USA and the rest of west must reduce the use or it will collapse in massive economic depression.
if ground rubber is added to the mix it's supposed to double the life of the asphalt . i assume it makes it more resilient to temp changes. basically more flexible which in cold weather is a benefit. also maybe makes it more waterproof. anybody know any details.?
In & around NYC, blue stone is used for the aggregate. In much of the country it's crushed limestone. Lighter color, but very soft stuff. Breaks down into finer and finer pieces until all you have is dust. New rock & gravel would be continuously needed. And still wouldn't be strong enough to last.
I live in Iowa, and I can tell you why recycled asphalt roads suck! They last about 3 weeks before they start breaking up, and don't get me started on how they do in winter. You'll be lucky if they aren't more like gravel roads after a nasty winter. Recycled asphalt is AWFUL!
It won't meet any DOT spec. They sell to homeowners and building owners. All the buyers know is they have new flexible black pavement, and they write the check for it.
@@sniper7.62x51 you can meet specs with it , but it’s usually just a small amount of RAP (recycled asphalt pavement).. the job i’m on now calls for 15% RAP in its mix design…. (in California)
About 20 years ago, me and a mate went on holiday to Canada. In the wild outback, miles from civilization they road gangs were ripping up the tarmac with huge machines, treating the tarmac with heat, then laying back down to make new roads. We had to stop and watch in amazement. They distances were too far to ship in new material, so the just recycled the original surface. 100% recycling, but of course Tarmac would not make a profit, if they didn't use new stuff!! This period in time is just so corrupt!!
What absolute rubbish, if they can really use that technology, as you say, then they can tender a much lower cost for repaving, and make a fortune, by winning all the tenders, through lower Costs.
@@joedennehy386 They can, and they did. Technology is not the limiting factor in the use of recycled asphalt, regulations are. In the case cited above I do believe they got an exemption due to the remoteness of the location. The only reason it's not used more often is that oil companies want to sell more oil and block it with their political influence.
You're clueless. They add additional binder when they resurface, and you can only do it so often before it has to go back to the facility for true preprocessing. If you don't know what you're looking at, shut your mouth.
The question that should be asked is, is the recycled asphalt better than the old asphalt it is replacing? If it is better than what is already on the road, replacing it is still better.
The old asphalt does not get dumped in a land fill anyway. Millings make great bases for residential driveways. Dump, spread it out , drive over it. It will be a bit wavy but it is cheap.
they just did a beautiful job repaving the plan I live in for the first time in 22 years. I have lived here 35 years and they only repaved it once.. they finished up the paving job in june.. then in July, they dug it all up replacing gas lines to every house in the plan… The worst part is, they did a horrible job filling in the trenches, and it’s just about to go into winter/snow plowing season. When that snow plow comes down my road, his plow is gonna catch all those unlevel edges and blow chunks out..Then as usual in the spring, the DPW guys will come around and make bumps out of holes
In the late 80's or early 90's there was a process developed to rip up asphalt, break it up, heat it, add a little fresh bitumen, then lay it right back onto where it was removed. I saw that equipment in operation several years ago, IIRC in Oklahoma. It was a pretty long line of equipment with the asphalt ripper in front with a conveyor dumping into a mobile heating vehicle. The hot ground up asphalt was then passed to a mixing vehicle then dumped onto the road bed to be rolled and compacted. Somewhere in there was a hot bitumen tanker.
they do though. I dont know about the profit margins of the people recycling it but the end product is cheaper than when it is fresh. So it makes business sense to use recycled asphalt.
Its for the profit, dont let them fool you. The liquid is the most expensive part of the mix and using recycle greatly reduces the cost...this isnt just for environmental reasons..
Here in Australia, road surfaces are routinely recovered and recycled during repair. In a country the size of the USA and only 25mil people to pay taxes, we need to save as much money as possible.
Well here in michigan where the roads have forever been shit but seem to get millions for renovations every year it would take away from the crooks in lansing skimming off the funds.
Most states use recycled crushed asphalt mixed with gravel as a base layer for roads they also use recycled concrete for base layer. So now if they use recycled asphalt for new pavement ontop of recycled crushed asphalt their could be zero waist
The used crushed asphalt is never wasted like this video suggests. It is used in temporary roads during bridge replacements, used on steep side slopes by bridges on county and township roads. Some townships use the recycled crushed asphalt as shoulder material. If it is available it makes a great private driveway, it lasts longer than gravel.
After it is screened, you can put it back down, wet it and pack it without adding new oil and it will make a good driveway or low traffic road. We have also mixed it with oilfield cuttings and made very cheap road base and pothole patching material.
loln this is the usual nonsense talk by this kind of guys, pretending to be green while their activity is in fact extremely polluting (blue smoke). It is also done since 45+ years, so they really did not innovate a bit nor are doing anythign special.
The old asphalt does not get dumped in a land fill anyway. Millings make great bases for residential driveways. Dump, spread it out , drive over it. It will be a bit wavy but it is cheap.
the reason fresh asphalt plant has less blue smoke is with fresh they cook the stone first get it hot then add the oil at the end . so the oil never sees the flame . with recycled the oil is being cooked along with the aggregate.
Trinidad has the biggest pitch lake in the world and yet the roads in Trinidad are the worst in the world. The government of trinidad needs to pay attention to this video and learn that there are methods ,techniques and solutions available to solve the deplorable roads in Trinidad and Tobago.
keep in mind this is a developed country, where the earth has already been prepared to asphalt work. The actual prep takes 3-6 months in a developed country for not even a big stretch of road. Earth works takes alot of time and costs alot of money, i can imagine in trinidad they will be ruined to make 50 miles of asphalt road.
@@cartman2dk trinidad is full of resources. Trinidad should have first world standard roads.However the government is so corrupt they refuse to invest and maintain the country’s roads. There is no excuse that the government can learn from what other countries are doing to improve the infrastructure of their country.
fully recycled material sound good and will be good at time of laying, but they don't mention the reduced ductility and susceptibility to cracking of recycled material due to bitumen aging. So a new surface corse might last 15 years this might last 5-10.
I love this idea so far. The only hurdles still to overcome are the blue smoke and the paraffin oil. The filtration process for the blue smoke appears to be working better than expected. I wish that there were a natural alternative to the paraffin oil, which would also help to reduce any emissions during the recycling process. Like all good ideas that will benefit humanity for the best, there will still be those special interests that don't want to have their precious profits affected. This will cause periods of lobbying where it will make this process harder to establish itself sustainability, in an region where a special interest has an incredible monopoly. I just hope that the courts and the EPA don't fall under their corrupting spells of greed.
I mean. Oil is natural. And as long as we are going to be making Diesel and Petrol, you'll be getting paraffin oil. so recycling asphalt makes a good use out of that byproduct.
Paraffin can be made from plant oils but if you want to unsustainable cheap palm oil it'll probably be expensive made from rapeseed or sunflower seed oil.
@@charlescourtwright2229 do what they did with the tesla factory in germany: just build track directly into factories, and directly to warehouses. it used to be a pretty common thing, there's still chemical plants in wales that have disused track leading up to them.
It's actually done a lot in my area. They save the piles and reuse them. Theres very specific areas you are to dump at if you have asphalt debris. The real problem is tires. There are countries that don't. I'll tell you the secret to recycling tires... liquid nitrogen. It subjects the tire to such a cold it crumbles and can be pressed through tubes like play dough to be reprocessed. You can even strain the wire out of it via a separator as it passes.
lol, what nonsense, this is done since more than 45 years, it has always been done, simply because construction companies are greedy and always looked for a way to save money while billing almost the same to the states. It is not green at all, first the product is harmful and contains a lot of heavy polluting compounds, second, burning used pavement is very polluting, and they surely dont clean the smoke as they pretend, at most they make it clear but i bet its is still as harmful. So this is really just a bullsh*t disguised advertisement.
I could swear you said 30% recycled content is the norm, then at 7:19 you say more than 90% of old asphalt already gets reused in new roads. What did I get wrong?
I think they meant the mixture is 30% recycled (gov fears anything more isn't strong enough) but their technology is pushing for 100% recycled mixture. The 90% is I'm guessing 90% of asphalt replacement is from recycled mixtures (of either 30% or more). Does that make sense? Analogy: norm of 30% water for a drink let's say instead of all fruit juice. Green company wants all of the drink to be 100% water. Already 90% of people drink the mixture of 30% or more of water, and not fully fruit juice. Hope that makes it easier to understand
It's not necessarily contradictory. The way I understood it is that 90% of old asphalt sitting in storage gets recycled but that every time they lay asphalt the mixture is comprised of 30% old and 70% new. This company is claiming to use 100% old for their mixture, rather than a 30/70 split.
Old asphalt usually has a lot of impurities e.g. water, acid, etc which tends to reduce life of road. Ottawa is an excellent examply of reused asphalt. Roads last 2-3 years vs 10 years for virgin asphalt. Comparison recycled vs virgin needs a life cycle analysis to determine which is more cost effective and sustainable.
Amen!!!! More power to ya! Even 50 recycled would be an improvement. 70% would be even better. I've used screened millings and covered them with basement wall sealer, and a little sand on top. It sealer soaks in and the sand or even pea gravel stops tracking the sealer. If I can do that asphalt companies have equipment that could duplicate or do what you guys are doing. Again, more power to you all.
The area I lived in up until this year recycled all of it with a limit on percentage for highways based on designation such as interstate, US highway, state, or county/city as each has its own issues in the hot and cold weather and base situations. However; that is a benefit as that left an amount for use in parking lots, driveways, and other applications without those needs at a lower cost. Otherwise you are paying more for your driveway for all new when all recycled does just as good.
they can purchase the patent and do it, The guys that invented the process had to develop it which is risky and costs enormous amounts without direct yield until the final product is releasable.
@@delgermuruntsagaankhuu6951 I’ve done a lot of research on patents bc I design stuff a lot. Unless you are planning to A) sell the design, or B) sell completed systems, it makes very little sense to get a patent for the sole purpose of “calling dibs”
I think this is a green initiative everyone can get behind. Doesnt take so much out of the current norm (like EV's for example, or Nuclear plants) but still makes a difference.
Edmonton, Alberta has been recycling most of it's asphalt for decades. We have special pavement planers that much up the old pavement and then mixes it with new bitumen and plastics.
@@crytocc no, you are quite literally allowed to improve on a patent and the resubmit for another patent. Go look at patent laws, they’re really complicated. Or using a create a similar method but using something that isn’t restricted explicitly in the patent.
@@dandellar200 don’t need to. Just go read the patent itself. For a patent to be approved there needs to be very detailed description of the construction and how it works.
I watched a road machine that cut up the aphalt road in front of it, heated and remixed it and layed it anew behind it... This was in the 80's... Where are those machines now??
they are still used and what this company does is nothign special, its been done since forever, it is not "green" by any stretch, its mostly a way to save or make money with taxpayers money.
Theoretically so. The most efficient way is to recycle it in place. Unfortunately, that doesn't work forever as along the time the stones will be ground to dust and the asphalt loses some of its strength. Of course the rest could potentially be used in some other place, like your front yard. You can also use slag and other materials as asphalt aggregate - just ensure it won't cause problems for car mechanics (it really can, ask for more information from Finland).
Can't do any mix design with this method. This material would be fine for private drives. It's won't hold up well under traffic. More power to them though
There is a lot of research on the use of recycled products in asphalt. I'd also like to note that often asphalt makes up only a small portion of the actual pavement.
Great job here, I fully support your efforts. Since you have cut of the back end of the business (digging up the aggregate) you should start your own paving company and contract directly with the cities and state and get your dream of worldwide use to the next level. Rather than battle the old ways become their competition. Isn’t that what America is all about. You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make him drink. Then walk on and prove he needs you more than you need him.
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Thanks so much!
You’re saying bitumen wrong.
Instead of using flame heating how about infra red heating? Is it possible to be powerful enough
In 2011, I was living in Joplin Missouri. We had an F5 tornado come through town that destroyed hundreds of homes and hundreds more with roof damage. The landfills in the area were overwhelmed with all the debris. So the decision was made to recycle all of the roof shingles into all of the asphalt needed to repair the city street. The city saved thousands of dollars and the streets are fine.
Scott joplin
Scott Joplin is da bomb.
@@jeremylandig2069 Sad what happened to him in the end
I was living in Lebanon Missouri when that tornado hit. I was working at Lowe Boats and a few us working there went down to help, the devastation was heart breaking.
Should be the law
I'm a civil engineer in germany, and we use up to 75% of recycled Asphalt in road construction. In fact you have to use by law.😄
@@waltstogner568 i dont know where you work, but in Bavaria we use 75% recycled material in the ATS.
I remember many many years back (early 90s?) when we got the first German asphalt grinders (Wirtgen, vielleicht) here in Finland, and it was called an expensive but good investment. Nowadays almost all asphalt is recycled here.
we limit recycled asphalt (RAP) to 15%.... Caltrans allows up to 25%. This video is biased/lying when it says "regulators limit"..... engineers limit it for good reason... - source: i'm an engineer....
@@cattnipp On a TH-cam comments section? Get out here dude.
@@Sam-qg1dy With the proper tech you can use a lot more than 25%: I'm not happy with 100% recycled either, but 90% can be done without drawbacks. We have tests streets from >30 years ago and so far it has the same degradation as new pavement. Currently working on a mobile recycling plant that can be set up close to the construction site. Because when the repavement starts, you need A LOT of trucks the get the stuff quick enough...
I find it amazing that asphalt torn up in the morning could potentially be repaved on the same road in the afternoon.
You get it.
The reason you can recycle metal is because metal grows very fast. Those tiny crystals grow immediately below melting point and it reverts back to order, to solid ... after you grind it to a powder and melt it. Now try the same with polymer chains. Bitumen or plastic or whatever. Polymer chains don't just grow back when going below melting point. They need very specific conditions to grow and you cannot recycle plastic or asphalt like you can recycle metal. The recycled material suffers partial degradation and the degraded chains cannot be separated and they contaminate the material and change it's properties. To lower the contamination level and mantain material quality, virgin material has to be added to the mix. It will NEVER work without adding virgin material
@@georgeyoutube7580 Did you watch the video? The fact is people ARE recycling asphalt. So the question of whether it can be done is moot at this point. As for plastic, that's a very broad term for a range of products. Some of which are 100% reusable, like PE, PET, PP, PS, PLA, etc.. I've been recycling HDPE at home for years, and we're starting to see consumer grade recycling equipment become more widely available. The plastics that can't be reused, you can use pyrolysis to turn them back into flammable substances for other uses. The word recycling covers a lot of options and I feel you're limiting your thoughts to simply reusing products, but any process that creates a new product from an old one is recycling.
@@M3rVsT4H well i worked in plastic industry. And you can recycle anything if you use broad terms. We managed to recycle biodegradable plastic. The client wanted to recycle the waste his factory produced. It can work to some extent but it doesn't really work cos the more recycled material you add to the mix, the more waste you make cos the final product start to fail and be non compliant in strenght and elasticity mostly. Sure, you can find another product to dump the recycled material, another technological process and you can recycle. But recycling asphalt to asphalt does not work without adding large amounts of virgin material. And it's stupid to try cos you compromise durability then you just doubled the amount of material you need to dump if the road lasts half as long
@@georgeyoutube7580 I think as more people use it for more things, the term recycling is becoming broader. We will likely see increased use of more specific terms like reused, upcycled.. etc. I'm no chemical engineer but my own thermoplastic recycling has been successful. And I've seen the pyrolysis work. But as you say, it depends how you want to define it. Obviously one must factor in consumables used in the process etc.
If this video presentation is to be believed, this company is 100% recycling asphalt, and the only virgin material added was the Paraffin used in the process. And if they've been laying it for 11 years, there should have been ample time to measure the product's performance.
Our residential development had its dirt road paved with recycled asphalt 18 years ago. It endured countless frost heaving, snow plowing & grader truck in winter, and heavy machinery traffic as the development expanded over the years. It’s still in really good shape.
What matters is the base under the road
Our roads in New York fall apart so fast with recycled asphalt
@@kevinbutton4580 wonder if they botched it to keep themselves busy.
@@kevinbutton4580 probably tens of millions of vehicles drive over those roads, so of course they will wear out faster than some road in a suburb
@@kevinbutton4580 Recycle shouldn't play a factor in how long a road will last if its done properly. The liquid does age but can be chemically restored back to its original state. I doubt your roads are 100% recycled anyways. Most plants do like 20 - 30%. NYS DOT wont let you exceed 20% for any state roads or state funded projects.
Awesome stuff.
Hello
Added to my "Solutions for Global Warming" playlist 😁
Proper roads = happy humvee
( ^)o(^ )b
I’ve hauled recycled asphalt in Arizona for the past 3 years it’s just as good as new asphalt can’t tell the difference when you see it.
That's the problem with asphalt in general, it looks all the same on the outside, but to characterize the binder's actual quality, we run performance based tests using machines like a Dynamic Shear Rheometer and Bending Beam Rheometer. 100% RAP can be used for parking lots and low volume roads, but wouldn't be suitable for highways since it has less relaxation capabilities than its virgin counterparts, and would pothole and fail faster than a traditional counterpart.
@@jainradhakrishnan6600 exactly. Thats why New York only allows 25% RAP on main roads and highways
@@jainradhakrishnan6600 Theres so many rejuvenators and additives available today to fix that though. I feel like the term recycled asphalt is kind of vague for the discussion too. We talking 100% recycled or just because it had 20% RAP or RAS its considered recycled asphalt?
@@koralr33fer79 True. At the moment, 100% recycled or reclaimed or shingled (RAP, RAS, etc) asphalt means no new virgin aggregate in the mix, and possibly no new asphalt binder.
To call a mix "100% Recycled", the only "new" thing should/would be the recycling agents added to rejuvenate the existing RAP/RAS binder. This is probably up for debate at different DOTs.
Amazes me how the workers weren't wearing any respiratory protection while laying down the asphalt. Poor lungs
🦾🤷🤪
I was thinking the exact same thing. It should be Mandatory, otherwise out of a purely monetary concern, they will tax the healthcare system in years to come.
Probably non union
My body my choice
@@justinn8410 too bad people don't choose to die at home. They then go to hospitals to strain resources...
Theres been lots of construction going on in my town lately, and it amazes me that no one wears any sort of respiratory protection :(
Even if your worried about recycled asphalt not being as good, why not use it on private drives and access roads that are used far less? I know in California there are a ton of roads in hills and mountains going to various installations that would benefit from recycled asphalt. What about making some VERY needed bike paths? That would be awesome.
We want those roads to stay dirt, less people in those places the better. I am a jeeper, it is a sport for us so stay off our turf buddy....
Germany is again ahead of its time: 80% of all asphalt is recycled, and we have 660 of these recycling facilities around the nation. Apparently, they also already have mobile recycling devices, which recycle and reuse the asphalt on the spot. Very cool!
the mobile recyclers are just the paving equipment. throw the old chunks in and it melts.
Yes, here in Canada we are at least 15-20 years behind. Then when we do come around it's treated like it's a brilliant idea and wonder why it took us so long to think of it...meanwhile the rest of the world moves on, and our stoner PM continues to get stoned.
@@Mr.SisterFisster Hot in place asphalt recycling occurs here in Canada too. Usually only used to resurface large highways.
90% of asphalt is recycled in the US, but 30% is the standard for new mixes. Usually the aggregates are crushed and reused as granular material (the sub-base of the road). Same happens with concrete.
@@Mr.SisterFisster I'm not arguing about the PM, but things aren't always as simple as they sound. This whole video is a one sided "commercial" for this "green paver" guy. Fact is, I'm fine with recycled, but in Hamilton Ontario they paved the Red Hill Expressway with some sort of "inferior" asphalt that has slightly less grip than what's normally specified. Two pretty teenage girls died one day (couldn't possibly have been driver error!) so suddenly there's billions spent to blame someone and repave etc. You wonder why things don't change too quickly around here? Who's going to put their name/career/professional status/company/personal wealth on the line to say "it's just as safe as new asphalt".
In a place like New York, the roads are always being torn up, they said so, so you don't even NEED the asphalt to be durable be ouse its gonna get milled in 5 or six years tops.
Millings in the UK are recycled. Just a few years ago you could get as much millings as you wanted for free to make gravel roads , now it's worth money.
Many years ago, I was in Boston (MA). During the Dukakis era. I witnessed road gangs ripping freeways during the night, and relaying them immediately. Only one lane of the multi-lane freeway was closed as the whole 'wagon train' 1/4 mile long, of machinery rolled on slowly. Brilliant. In the intervening 45 years I have never seen it done anywhere elsewhere !
I remember going down 495 in my dad's truck seeing 👀 that!!!
no way
I think I've seen that being done in Atlanta.
1:18 wow …. The simplicity of it all really is ingenious. I feel like I could build a road myself seeing that classic way
You certainly could as long as you had that roller machine
@@ashevilletrainman6989 You don't have a roller machine?
It's not complicated but it's hard work.
I remember reading where some states use old car tires, grind them up, and mix with the asphalt. This reduces the tires in the landfill, but also cuts down on asphalt material and the roads last a lot better. The only downfall is because the roads can last longer, it is less maintenance, and thus less work for the employees.
Yes, and that’s generally the city or state workers. What does that mean? Less cost, lower maintenance and therefore less ‘government UNION’ members and less union money to the democrats. Can’t have that.
This mix you are talking about is terrible. It would stick to the insides of the paver. Rollers would pick up because the rubber was so thick within this mix design. It would take 2 hours to clean out the paver verses 30 minutes. It’s sounds great, but in reality it will take some more development.
@@выложитьнаютуб Oh, I didn't know that. Interesting to know. Thanks for sharing.
Less maintenance is a downside? Maybe they can repair some roads OTHER than the main thoroughfares. You'll never run out of shitty old roads that haven't been repaved in 10+ years.
And there you run into the broken window parable
Maybe some 20 years ago I saw a machine in Norway that was digging up the asphalt of a road in the front, heating it up and laying it back down in the rear of the machine.
Absolutely awesome. In Norway there is so much snow, that cars have winter tires with spikes, which tear up the road. They use these machines only during the night, because they move very slowly and cause a horrific traffic jam.
Type "Hot In-place Asphalt Recycling"
Bomag has been making machines for decades that grind up the old asphalt road in front of it, and recycles the materials and lays the new road out behind it but it is very slow, and costy
That is so Scandinavian. I love it.
This seems like a solid win/win. Wishing them all the best. Now we need someone to go commercial with a process to repurpose composite waste into concrete reinforcement.
There’s a company in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan that uses a poly gator bar made from composite materials that gets used in curb reinforcement. Not allowed in anything else as it hasn’t had enough time in projects to show a failure rate.
@@travisvanalst4698 I've seen some fibreglass and composite reinforcement products, but are you saying those ones are recycled?
I really wonder how Buisness insider chooses so many wonderful topics and game changing ideas🙏🏻
Recycled ashpalt has been used since the 80's, they do the same thing with asphalt shingles in blacktop too. This isnt really new...
If 90% is already being recycle, thats good enough in my book. Getting that last 10% is difficult and will take a lot more money and resources that are probably better spent elsewhere.
According to the video most asphalt 30% max and it’s 20% cheaper. 90% of the leftover asphalt is reused in roads but 30% of the new road is recycled . Meaning there are large piles of asphalt building up AND new mining occurs. That’s the whole issue.
You could just use the remaining 10% to fill out potholes
@@user-bl3si3kq6x what? What is ”leftover” asfalt? Your centences make no sense unfortunately.
@@ripprind it's simple. It doesn't say a new road is 90% recycled. It says 30% of a new road is recycled asphalt. new, additional roads are being built. 90% of the trashphalt is eventually reused. So the 10% is growing (because there are always more roads,which need maintaining) but mining, which is overall worse, continues.
When I read above comment, I was confused at first too.
@@somerandofilipino6957 it is being used. But the 10% is getting bigger. Stop mining and the 10% will disappear. That's this companies entire argument.
08:58 the black pavement absorbs heat - while recycling asphalt, can additives be used to lighten its color to grey? can this be done without impacting asphalt quality?
Had the same thought, is mixing in chalck, quartz or granite an option?
The black color is desirable for visibility of the road, lane striping, and safety markings.
@@dhequipmentltd Are there additives that can make the road "white" to the infrared and ultraviolet spectra, where people can't see it, so that the road can still look black, but reflect a significant portion of the sun's light?
Some areas of some US States use aggregate that's either high in iron or is crushed lava 'cinder' rock, giving the asphalt a dark red color, sort of like red velvet chocolate cake.
@@johnnyvh1188🤓🍙 SiO2 sand has different use.📠🪟🪞🖥📲
My 350 foot driveway is made from millings. Fresh from a ground up road and parking lot and dumped here. Spread it out and its solid as a rock. Not as good as spreading a hot mix but damn good. Recycling it back to hot mix is no different than making it new. It should all be recycled.
This is great way to help the planet because it’s something we need to live our lives
Don't forget the huge amount of potholes that kill shock absorbers and therefore more waste material. Etc etc.
Nah really
@@laurapalmerTDGE nah but that’s true
Wow ! Very well done video! I'm totally sold! We all need to push for this green industry! Love the guy being interviewed! He's right on!
As if reusing asphalt hasnt been a thing since 1980...
the private contractors the city I work for have multi million dollar machines that already recycle the road they tear up and remix it with fresh tack and pave it all in a single pass, its quite an amazing material.
As well I have Observed that the colour of the ??tar laid down before applying the new asphalt is different! Now adays is a brown in colour not the black of 40+ yrs ago!
@@edwardcarberry1095 Odd I haven't seem brown asphalt where we get our supply. If we get a load that is brown we consider it a contaminated load with too much dirt and not enough oil in it and send it back for a better load.
The brown what ever shade they call that which is sprayed on the old ashpault which is then covered. It used to be sprayed just before it was covered, not now have seen it sit over night before it is covered.
@@edwardcarberry1095 yeah the new tack as we call it is a brown color now and has a sweet smell to it. its water based if I remember and is a bit cheaper but just as effective. that is used to seal the pavement below the fresh asphalt that is paved down.
Thanks.
It does NOT Work nearly as well!
Love your video great idea love every bit of it I hauled asphalt cement for 30 years and always wondered why it couldn't be recycled 100% and you're right even in Canada they only use 30% our roads are deteriorating so bad in North America and why aren't they doing this now I've seen machines that are recycling the roads which is awesome why isn't that also being done thank you for your video love it
Another really great video! I know another large hurdle in the US is regulatory -- most states have an upper limit set for what percent of highway pavement can be recycled (either from pavement or shingles).
I'm curious if anyone knows what other uses there are for the crude oil fractions that would be replaced by green bitumen -- if we don't use those fractions (side products from fuel distillation) for bitumen, where does they go? Are there other uses that are also recyclable?
It's not regulatory, it's specification e.g. quality.
What's not being mentioned is that rap is of a lower quality then virgin. Old bitumen is more oxidised so it's lower quality then virgin as more of the oils in the binder make it flexable are gone. So you still need to add new binder.
What's also not mentioned is the crushing of the rap makes the stone portions smaller so it's not optimal for large stone size mixes.
Finally you can't heat it to the same tempature as the bitumen in the rap oxidises as it goes through the burner if it's hoter then 180degree c.
So yes you can recycle it but not at 100% for main roads etc.
It's also normally a pig to hand work so not great for small jobs either
@@nimrodbegg123 thanks for the supporting info!
@@nimrodbegg123 They do mention it's not the same quality, it's why they add the paraffin oil. I'll bet not much of the stone gets broken in the process, it's the strongest part of the mix- not to mention they sort the stone size so they can make the final mix with the proper proportions. 180 deg isn't the limit as they heat it to 300 degrees. Did you watch the video or just reporting your 'expertise' on how recycled asphalt 'isn't good'? 'Experts' have so much difficulty with change, they 'already know it all'.
@@troyclayton I watched the video, and what they are making is exactly what we made in Melbourne and Adelaide for doing carparks and paver laid footpaths. It is not main roads spec, though at least in Aussie we were laying and making all the way up to 70 percent recycled mixes to go to subdivisions and council roads where they where willing to accept quality sacrifice's.
State highways really wouldn't go beyond 30 percent due to aged binder concerns.
Also adding volitiles to the mix rather then the binder has issues, as it's lower softening point can negatively impact the life of the mix, and it's reslience
The crushers do smash stone as that what they are meant to do, and the rap comes from profilers that normally pulverise the pavement to shoot it into trucks.
7 years of playing with asphalt mix and asphalt plants teaches you a wee bit about.
100 percent was something we could do but the quality issues on a product you had to warranty was a issue
Also some countries use units that actually make sense and bitumen as a whole tends to oxidise at or near 180 degree c
@@nimrodbegg123 good explanation. Thanks.
I'd love to see them also paving with plastics and rubber at the end of its life as well. Plastic and Rubber make some durable roads
3:45 a bigger roof cover and led light focused on the conveyor line, will help keep the worker cool and increase his productivity.. Piss me off that business took workers well-being for granted
@2:25 Its not just big cities that do this. Even in my small town, a main route (approximately one mile)to the densest shopping area was repaved. The next week, the municipal water and sewer department cut a zigzag trench to repair the system. All the manhole covers, which are apparently required to be placed in the tire track of the lane, were five inches lower than the new road. Yes, the put in new manhole trunks that were shorter than the ones they were replacing. 30 days later, after the uproar from residents of all the towns that have to use that specific road to get to shopping, the town had to repave the entire road.
4:58 You can't say it green asphalt. It's "green washing" bcz asphalt is not green anyway. But it's better than traditional asphalt. We should say it clearly 50% green asphalt or half green or something. Still material engineers have responsibility in finding green road materials other than asphalt.
I love the smell of fresh asphalt. Especially after quenched with water. Euphoric.
certainley clears the chest
Asphalt is effectively made from waste products of the petroleum industry.... So reducing our use won't really reduce production. Plus the carbon remains trapped if it's on the road or capping a landfill. As we decarbon our world (assuming that ever happens) reusing asphalt makes more and more sense, but it's not fixing a problem per se.
Yes asphalt is not a problem. It is just good use of the waste of oil refining. The main problem is the abuse of the oil itself for fuels. The USA and the rest of west must reduce the use or it will collapse in massive economic depression.
Who ever makes the machinary that they’re using, shout outs to you & your creativity to keep the world flowing! 🙏🏽 💐
Its the same shit thats been used since like 1980
Man hats off to these guys going forward, people like this are the ones saving our planet.
if ground rubber is added to the mix it's supposed to double the life of the asphalt . i assume it makes it more resilient to temp changes. basically more flexible which in cold weather is a benefit. also maybe makes it more waterproof. anybody know any details.?
no
In & around NYC, blue stone is used for the aggregate. In much of the country it's crushed limestone. Lighter color, but very soft stuff. Breaks down into finer and finer pieces until all you have is dust. New rock & gravel would be continuously needed. And still wouldn't be strong enough to last.
should add ground rubber to the mix. doubles the life
I live in Iowa, and I can tell you why recycled asphalt roads suck! They last about 3 weeks before they start breaking up, and don't get me started on how they do in winter. You'll be lucky if they aren't more like gravel roads after a nasty winter. Recycled asphalt is AWFUL!
One of the challenges of producing recycled asphalt is meeting state specs when the materials being reused have varying oil types and gradations…
It won't meet any DOT spec. They sell to homeowners and building owners.
All the buyers know is they have new flexible black pavement, and they write the check for it.
@@sniper7.62x51 you can meet specs with it , but it’s usually just a small amount of RAP (recycled asphalt pavement).. the job i’m on now calls for 15% RAP in its mix design…. (in California)
About 20 years ago, me and a mate went on holiday to Canada. In the wild outback, miles from civilization they road gangs were ripping up the tarmac with huge machines, treating the tarmac with heat, then laying back down to make new roads. We had to stop and watch in amazement. They distances were too far to ship in new material, so the just recycled the original surface. 100% recycling, but of course Tarmac would not make a profit, if they didn't use new stuff!! This period in time is just so corrupt!!
" Me and a mate "It's me and my mate ffs, sort ya head out n talk English init!
What absolute rubbish, if they can really use that technology, as you say, then they can tender a much lower cost for repaving, and make a fortune, by winning all the tenders, through lower Costs.
Canada has been doing it for over 40 years.The U..S . invented the car, but the U.S. roads are so inferior , compared to Canadian roads .
@@joedennehy386 They can, and they did. Technology is not the limiting factor in the use of recycled asphalt, regulations are. In the case cited above I do believe they got an exemption due to the remoteness of the location. The only reason it's not used more often is that oil companies want to sell more oil and block it with their political influence.
You're clueless. They add additional binder when they resurface, and you can only do it so often before it has to go back to the facility for true preprocessing. If you don't know what you're looking at, shut your mouth.
This was very informative!!!! Good on the CEO for coming up with this solution, and for creating jobs!
lol, wha solution? it is done this way since 45 years at the very least. It is also not green by any stretch, it is in fact very polluting.
The question that should be asked is, is the recycled asphalt better than the old asphalt it is replacing? If it is better than what is already on the road, replacing it is still better.
It is probably equal. The problem is that the companies selling asphalt wants to make money and recycling asphalt means they will sell less. :(
@ideadlift20kg83 Unfortunately, recycled asphalt is not as durable. 100% recycled cannot be used for applications such as highways.
Recycled and permeable roads are the types that should be used widely.
Permeable roads suck, wouldnt put it in my driveway
-signed aspahlt QC
They could use the old Asphalt for the foundations of homes and buildings or along train tracks if broken up to the desired sizes
I hope they use 100% recycled everywhere soon!
It seems pretty cool but you still have a problem when making more roads.
The old asphalt does not get dumped in a land fill anyway. Millings make great bases for residential driveways. Dump, spread it out , drive over it. It will be a bit wavy but it is cheap.
Great doco vid. Recycle roads has to be good. Reminds me of the old joke... She was only the road maker's daughter but she loved having her asphalt. 🤣
Bitumin is usually pronounced differently.. pretty interesting to hear this voice over
And how is it usually pronounced?
@@when_life_gives_you_limes it's pronounced bitumen, and the narrator said bitumen.
@@when_life_gives_you_limes BIT-umin, not bit-U-min
they just did a beautiful job repaving the plan I live in for the first time in 22 years. I have lived here 35 years and they only repaved it once.. they finished up the paving job in june..
then in July, they dug it all up replacing gas lines to every house in the plan… The worst part is, they did a horrible job filling in the trenches, and it’s just about to go into winter/snow plowing season. When that snow plow comes down my road, his plow is gonna catch all those unlevel edges and blow chunks out..Then as usual in the spring, the DPW guys will come around and make bumps out of holes
In the late 80's or early 90's there was a process developed to rip up asphalt, break it up, heat it, add a little fresh bitumen, then lay it right back onto where it was removed. I saw that equipment in operation several years ago, IIRC in Oklahoma. It was a pretty long line of equipment with the asphalt ripper in front with a conveyor dumping into a mobile heating vehicle. The hot ground up asphalt was then passed to a mixing vehicle then dumped onto the road bed to be rolled and compacted. Somewhere in there was a hot bitumen tanker.
They do this in Philadelphia now.
Watch the wirtgen group...
I've known this for 30 years. My driveway was a recycled interstate.
feels good to know people do stuff not only for the profit.
they do though. I dont know about the profit margins of the people recycling it but the end product is cheaper than when it is fresh. So it makes business sense to use recycled asphalt.
Its for the profit, dont let them fool you. The liquid is the most expensive part of the mix and using recycle greatly reduces the cost...this isnt just for environmental reasons..
This is very hydrating to watch
😂😂😂😂😂😂
Here in Australia, road surfaces are routinely recovered and recycled during repair.
In a country the size of the USA and only 25mil people to pay taxes, we need to save as much money as possible.
Well here in michigan where the roads have forever been shit but seem to get millions for renovations every year it would take away from the crooks in lansing skimming off the funds.
6:52 forbidden brownies...😋
Here in Germany we have to reuse all of the old asphalt, as long, as it is not pulluted too much, at least as far as I know
Most states use recycled crushed asphalt mixed with gravel as a base layer for roads they also use recycled concrete for base layer. So now if they use recycled asphalt for new pavement ontop of recycled crushed asphalt their could be zero waist
The used crushed asphalt is never wasted like this video suggests. It is used in temporary roads during bridge replacements, used on steep side slopes by bridges on county and township roads. Some townships use the recycled crushed asphalt as shoulder material. If it is available it makes a great private driveway, it lasts longer than gravel.
AWESOME...ABOUT TIME WE REUSE ASPHALT. NOW LET'S DO THAT ALL OVER THE U.S.A. 🇺🇲💜🇺🇲💜🇺🇲
Excellent! Hope this is followed across the globe help cutting pollution and valuable natural resources
A win for the environment 😎👌
Everyone likes to say "things can be recycled" but never talk about how environmentally damaging the actual recycling process is
True, but in asphalts case the cost is very low.
After it is screened, you can put it back down, wet it and pack it without adding new oil and it will make a good driveway or low traffic road. We have also mixed it with oilfield cuttings and made very cheap road base and pothole patching material.
Here in Michigan are roads are made from recycled materials to make it cheaper and environmental friendly 😊
Thank you for pronouncing the word "Asphalt" correctly. !!!!
I love what he says at the end, if the world says your crazy, you must be doing something right.
The world says that anyone talking about election fraud is crazy too tho. What's ur position
That’s potentially dangerous thing to live by…
@@brianandrews7491 NOPE, NO, NO, NO! Three things my daddy taught me NEVER to talk about: Religion, Politics or your Sex Life.
No, usually it means you *are* crazy. Otherwise all the breatharians would survive and the perpetuum mobile inventors would be billionaires.
loln this is the usual nonsense talk by this kind of guys, pretending to be green while their activity is in fact extremely polluting (blue smoke). It is also done since 45+ years, so they really did not innovate a bit nor are doing anythign special.
That makes a whole lot of sense, keep up the good work. ♻️green asphalt ✅️
The old asphalt does not get dumped in a land fill anyway. Millings make great bases for residential driveways. Dump, spread it out , drive over it. It will be a bit wavy but it is cheap.
I never knew the concept of 100% recycled asphalt businesses would be entertaining to me one day
the reason fresh asphalt plant has less blue smoke is with fresh they cook the stone first get it hot then add the oil at the end . so the oil never sees the flame . with recycled the oil is being cooked along with the aggregate.
Trinidad has the biggest pitch lake in the world and yet the roads in Trinidad are the worst in the world. The government of trinidad needs to pay attention to this video and learn that there are methods ,techniques and solutions available to solve the deplorable roads in Trinidad and Tobago.
keep in mind this is a developed country, where the earth has already been prepared to asphalt work. The actual prep takes 3-6 months in a developed country for not even a big stretch of road. Earth works takes alot of time and costs alot of money, i can imagine in trinidad they will be ruined to make 50 miles of asphalt road.
@@cartman2dk trinidad is full of resources. Trinidad should have first world standard roads.However the government is so corrupt they refuse to invest and maintain the country’s roads. There is no excuse that the government can learn from what other countries are doing to improve the infrastructure of their country.
fully recycled material sound good and will be good at time of laying, but they don't mention the reduced ductility and susceptibility to cracking of recycled material due to bitumen aging. So a new surface corse might last 15 years this might last 5-10.
I love this idea so far. The only hurdles still to overcome are the blue smoke and the paraffin oil. The filtration process for the blue smoke appears to be working better than expected. I wish that there were a natural alternative to the paraffin oil, which would also help to reduce any emissions during the recycling process.
Like all good ideas that will benefit humanity for the best, there will still be those special interests that don't want to have their precious profits affected. This will cause periods of lobbying where it will make this process harder to establish itself sustainability, in an region where a special interest has an incredible monopoly. I just hope that the courts and the EPA don't fall under their corrupting spells of greed.
I mean. Oil is natural. And as long as we are going to be making Diesel and Petrol, you'll be getting paraffin oil. so recycling asphalt makes a good use out of that byproduct.
Paraffin can be made from plant oils but if you want to unsustainable cheap palm oil it'll probably be expensive made from rapeseed or sunflower seed oil.
Great video always watching from Georgetown Guyana south America 🇬🇾🇬🇾🇬🇾🇬🇾💯🇬🇾🇬🇾🇬🇾
Road's worst enemies are 18 wheelers and trucks in general. Just ban those and replace them with trains
You would still need them to move cargo from trains to warehouses
Trucks build the roads.
@@charlescourtwright2229 do what they did with the tesla factory in germany: just build track directly into factories, and directly to warehouses. it used to be a pretty common thing, there's still chemical plants in wales that have disused track leading up to them.
Trains are just the most energy efficient machine for transport, trucks don't even come close
Amazing I remember watching them tear up a road next to my house and put a new one up when I was like 7 years old, I'd love to see it as an adult
It's actually done a lot in my area. They save the piles and reuse them. Theres very specific areas you are to dump at if you have asphalt debris. The real problem is tires. There are countries that don't. I'll tell you the secret to recycling tires... liquid nitrogen. It subjects the tire to such a cold it crumbles and can be pressed through tubes like play dough to be reprocessed. You can even strain the wire out of it via a separator as it passes.
There must be a way to make light colored asphalt. Imagine the cooling that would allow in cities.
Whoa that’d be dope
I mean after a while, it looks grey instead of black?
Great job Guys, You really are saving environment. Thank you so very much
lol, what nonsense, this is done since more than 45 years, it has always been done, simply because construction companies are greedy and always looked for a way to save money while billing almost the same to the states. It is not green at all, first the product is harmful and contains a lot of heavy polluting compounds, second, burning used pavement is very polluting, and they surely dont clean the smoke as they pretend, at most they make it clear but i bet its is still as harmful.
So this is really just a bullsh*t disguised advertisement.
Very much needed for every country
I could swear you said 30% recycled content is the norm, then at 7:19 you say more than 90% of old asphalt already gets reused in new roads. What did I get wrong?
Your right. Seems to me that they made a mistake.
I wonder if they mean: “in 90% of new projects, recycled asphalt gets used”.
I think they meant the mixture is 30% recycled (gov fears anything more isn't strong enough) but their technology is pushing for 100% recycled mixture. The 90% is I'm guessing 90% of asphalt replacement is from recycled mixtures (of either 30% or more). Does that make sense?
Analogy: norm of 30% water for a drink let's say instead of all fruit juice. Green company wants all of the drink to be 100% water. Already 90% of people drink the mixture of 30% or more of water, and not fully fruit juice. Hope that makes it easier to understand
It's not necessarily contradictory. The way I understood it is that 90% of old asphalt sitting in storage gets recycled but that every time they lay asphalt the mixture is comprised of 30% old and 70% new. This company is claiming to use 100% old for their mixture, rather than a 30/70 split.
I think u can use it for other things like shingles though it might be the other way around
Old asphalt usually has a lot of impurities e.g. water, acid, etc which tends to reduce life of road. Ottawa is an excellent examply of reused asphalt. Roads last 2-3 years vs 10 years for virgin asphalt. Comparison recycled vs virgin needs a life cycle analysis to determine which is more cost effective and sustainable.
Asphalt millings are mainly used on homeowners driveways
Negative. We use it on major expressways and runways, too.
Amen!!!! More power to ya! Even 50 recycled would be an improvement. 70% would be even better. I've used screened millings and covered them with basement wall sealer, and a little sand on top. It sealer soaks in and the sand or even pea gravel stops tracking the sealer. If I can do that asphalt companies have equipment that could duplicate or do what you guys are doing. Again, more power to you all.
I'll believe it when I see the compaction, and degradation data. So far, I haven't seen 100% RAP hold up.
normal asphalt isn't very durable, that's why it's constantly being repaired
The area I lived in up until this year recycled all of it with a limit on percentage for highways based on designation such as interstate, US highway, state, or county/city as each has its own issues in the hot and cold weather and base situations. However; that is a benefit as that left an amount for use in parking lots, driveways, and other applications without those needs at a lower cost. Otherwise you are paying more for your driveway for all new when all recycled does just as good.
Ya know… If they didn’t patent that filtering system, other asphalt recyclers could also use it.
they can purchase the patent and do it, The guys that invented the process had to develop it which is risky and costs enormous amounts without direct yield until the final product is releasable.
@@delgermuruntsagaankhuu6951 I’ve done a lot of research on patents bc I design stuff a lot. Unless you are planning to A) sell the design, or B) sell completed systems, it makes very little sense to get a patent for the sole purpose of “calling dibs”
@@drew899 False. Most patents are defensive, and for new companies, obtained to entice investment.
@@BoxStudioExecutive I get the enticing investments part. I guess that makes sense.
That make sense in business term, But is it ethical to limit technology that could help our planet?
Nice, glad they are doing that.
Interesting stuff
I think this is a green initiative everyone can get behind. Doesnt take so much out of the current norm (like EV's for example, or Nuclear plants) but still makes a difference.
Edmonton, Alberta has been recycling most of it's asphalt for decades. We have special pavement planers that much up the old pavement and then mixes it with new bitumen and plastics.
incrível 🙌
Looks like a great place to recycle asphalt an concrete grinding up an Adding the binders to it
You know if green asphalt actually cared about the environment they'd freely share that blue smoke removal patent.
You are free to look at the patent and make a better version and then share that if you want to.
@@Alsry1 By definition, no, you're not actually free to do that. That's kind of the point of patents.
@@Alsry1 sure, you can ask them to stop there operation, and let you look at their patented machine, if you ask them nicely.
@@crytocc no, you are quite literally allowed to improve on a patent and the resubmit for another patent. Go look at patent laws, they’re really complicated. Or using a create a similar method but using something that isn’t restricted explicitly in the patent.
@@dandellar200 don’t need to. Just go read the patent itself. For a patent to be approved there needs to be very detailed description of the construction and how it works.
I watched a road machine that cut up the aphalt road in front of it, heated and remixed it and layed it anew behind it... This was in the 80's... Where are those machines now??
they are still used and what this company does is nothign special, its been done since forever, it is not "green" by any stretch, its mostly a way to save or make money with taxpayers money.
why don't we just use dirt?
Theoretically so. The most efficient way is to recycle it in place. Unfortunately, that doesn't work forever as along the time the stones will be ground to dust and the asphalt loses some of its strength. Of course the rest could potentially be used in some other place, like your front yard. You can also use slag and other materials as asphalt aggregate - just ensure it won't cause problems for car mechanics (it really can, ask for more information from Finland).
'why arent more cities doing this?' capitalism lmao
Everyone’s favorite scapegoat
it's actually cheaper recycling
@hitman.radio30 free pollution for everyone
Lmao, blaming capitalism for something government does.
@@mason6883 We have capitalist government. Lol
Can't do any mix design with this method. This material would be fine for private drives. It's won't hold up well under traffic. More power to them though
first lol
second
There is a lot of research on the use of recycled products in asphalt. I'd also like to note that often asphalt makes up only a small portion of the actual pavement.
Great job here, I fully support your efforts. Since you have cut of the back end of the business (digging up the aggregate) you should start your own paving company and contract directly with the cities and state and get your dream of worldwide use to the next level. Rather than battle the old ways become their competition. Isn’t that what America is all about. You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make him drink. Then walk on and prove he needs you more than you need him.
ive watched this video like 10 times, so oddly satisfying to watch