@@ThrowingItAway Silicosis is a form of occupational lung disease caused by inhalation of crystalline silica dust. Glass is amorphous silica dust. Rocks are made of all kinds of nasty stuff, not just silicon dioxide. Arsenic, chromium, lead, copper, asbestos... When a rock dust gets wet and then dry it is bit like concrete. You don't want concrete in your lungs.
Really good work Jason! MBMM is certainly a terrific Equipment Seller 100%! Traveling to Europe and Staying Engaged with your customers is Invaluable! Excellent! You are definitely golden! Thanks much ✌️PT
I love your videos and your technologies along with your explanations your give. It is very comprehensive and in depth. I learn so much and so many alternatives to tradition methods. A great job and much appreciated!
That's pretty cool man hanging with the customers I'm pretty sure they were excited to see you at a lot of questions they seemed really attentive to what they were being shown and what you were explaining to them.
Awesome brother you and your TEAM make it realistic. I love your enthusiasm in not just your hobby but made it your career. On top of that your mercury recovery in your last video was crazy.
that is so awesome to see your products being put to such efficient use. I love that its use is to recycle and repurpose materials that would otherwise just get thrown away typically because most consumers might not realize the recoverable metals on each chip board.
What a great demo tour! Your product sure produces some impressive result's for your customer's. Even though i am more of a Precious metals guy, the extraction of base metals for recycling is fascinating and important as well. Thanks for sharing Gaber😁🤙
I love your content, Jason!! I especially enjoy watching the collabs with my other favorite YT content creators, like Jeff Williams and Dan Hurd! I learn something new with every video I watch. Keep up the great work!! 😉
ok, i am very impressed with all the different companies are doing with your machines. its much less waste going to land fills or trash dumps and a much more environmentally friendly way to try to recycle as much as possible. if i had the money from what i saw in this video i would want to invest into your company to get more people or companies to go this route.
The reclaimed fiberglass and plastic can be mixed with agregate in making concrete. The fiberglass more than plastic will help reinforce concreete reducing cracks.
Not sure if anyone has thought about it, but the waste material, if 99.9% fiberglass, could be used as insulation, or additive for construction materials such as brick or concrete.
Is there any way to run lithium ion batteries through your system so that the cobalt copper and nickel could be recovered? You might have to do it in the middle of winter so there’s no thermal runaway cost by the lithium
Hi Jason. Huge fan of your work. You wouldn't have a hammermill to pelletizer kind of thing for cardboard would you? I'm a gourmet mushroom company, and am looking into using my mushroom waste to turn cardboard recycling material into an organic byproduct.
i worked at a factory that had a roller magnet that pulled the steel out of our product it was mounted above the belt and had a wipe that took the steel off into a bucket to the side.
I imagine and hope more and more domestic customers are lining up for your products and are not shipping as much waste as we used to. Also, I can imagine there could be a composite product made with that processed fiberglass. There is obviously a much larger market for composite than five years ago.
Could the plastic/fibreglass waste be dried out and sold to a panel production company (or as vehicle panel repair paste?) using resin or 2 part adhesive paste as binding agents?
Just throwing it out there: I've invented an air classifying process that's inexpensive and simple. You basically get an insulation removal gas powered vacuum (or modified walk behind leaf blower) the next part is key- it's called "lay flat" which is clear plastic tubing that comes on a flat roll. When air is blown into lay flat it expands into a giant semi solid tube, it's used for temporary ventilation during remediation of asbestos, mold, and chemicals. You then use the suction end of the vacuum to pull in your mixed media scrap which is subsequently deposited in the giant lay flat tube in descending order of density, it's quite amazing how well it classifies. after a long run you can cut open the lay flat nearest to the vacuum and extract the highest density material, then use 3m spray adhesive to seal the tube up, or just cut off and dispose of the cut section. Just throwing out my particular air classifier invention I built on accident while doing remediation work.
When processing something like that ASR at the end, would it make sense to have a magnet between the hammermill and the table to grab the ferrous stuff before trying to otherwise separate it? I'm envisioning a rather slowly rotating drum magnet with a scraper to get the iron off it.
The plastic can be turned to fuel, the carbon leftover used as fertilizer, and after it is carbon it is also easy to recover that 0.1%. I seen a plastic recycling plant, you can even build it yourself, fairly simple however the catalizer which turns the oil into gasoline diesel, kerosene and gas is the most expensive part, rest is welded iron.
Mount Baker mountain is located above the old town of Baker on the Baker river east of Concrete washington if memory serves me close... is that where your from or how you named your company? I lived there for around fifteen years before leaving for forks washington an then to alaska. I could surely use a mill like you have.. that said, I am too old to make it go for me now... at seventy three, a torn up old man who has a mile or two in mining.. know of a good copper, silver, gold and zinc mine on the cascade river country.
I wonder if that fiberglass is too short to use in short hair fiberglass filler, or maybe in cement to strengthen it, I think a short and long hair mix works for that
There's a lady in Africa that makes bricks out of recycled plastics. That plastic/fiberglass would be great mixed into bricks, or as an additive to exterior stucco etc.
Thanks Jason…QUESTION…as steel and copper have two different melting points why can’t a waste product be ??roasted to a point where the copper melts down/off and leaves the ferrous metals deprecated ?
In the video you said this guy is trying to find a use for the plastic and fiberglass waste. Ive seen pallets and park benches and tables and other things made from plastic waste that isnt normally recycled. I think its warmed and pressed in molds to make useful items. I dont know if that is possible, its just a guess but it may be a possible solution for reuse of that material.
It's simply a repost of an older video. But in the comments of those video, someone was still answering questions about the waste product they found no usecase for.
This is responsible recycling. Most what we think are being recycled is shipped to third world countries and done in a way that leaves their community a disaster. We need more plastic processing all in all but being able to extract the heavies is a big step in all our futures.
@@katieandkevinsears7724 Yeah so whatever you make from it needs to either be something that will never end up by water or is broken down and plastic completely removed. It creates micro plastics but even they can be handled responsibility.
If the waste your friend is looking to find a use for is non-toxic and inert it could be used as filter media for a fluidized bed filter for aquariums and ponds that use biological filtration. Essentially it's just a scaffold for bacteria to colonize so it can be made of many things as long as it is a good substrate for the bacteria and since everything in the pond and Aquarium trade is overpriced it might be a good place to get the most money for a waste product
I think the guy in Romania should try mixing his waste fiberglass and plastic into concrete. Seems like it would make a decent aggregate in some proportion.
ok, the guy with the giant pile of tailings. was his plan to burn off the plastic to make fuel? that seems very toxic and bad, i got no idea what im talking about tho
Hey :) maybe the fiberglass remains can be used to strengthen concrete castings? as a thank you for the proposal, maybe you can give me 0.1% of the annual profits from the sale of the fiberglass scraps ;)
I love how effective your systems are. There's no harmful glass dust since it's a wet process and 99.9% recovery of precious materials
u got balls bro goin over there n all that lol nice
Glass is next to nothing campared to rocks.
@@XtreeM_FaiL Ever heard of silicosis?
@@ThrowingItAway Silicosis is a form of occupational lung disease caused by inhalation of crystalline silica dust.
Glass is amorphous silica dust.
Rocks are made of all kinds of nasty stuff, not just silicon dioxide.
Arsenic, chromium, lead, copper, asbestos...
When a rock dust gets wet and then dry it is bit like concrete. You don't want concrete in your lungs.
Really good work Jason! MBMM is certainly a terrific Equipment Seller 100%!
Traveling to Europe and Staying Engaged with your customers is Invaluable!
Excellent!
You are definitely golden!
Thanks much
✌️PT
It is awesome to see you grow into a real youtuber of the last few years
Your tables are truly getting a “proofs in the pudding” workout Jason. Very cool buddy🇺🇸
"The proof of the pudding is in the eating." There's no proof in the pudding.
@@SaxonSuccess I dunno if youre trying to be funny, either way, you failed.
That was a lot of fun - thanks for taking us along.
It's great to see the recycling of everything all over the world. Also it's great to see that mbmm. Can help and be involved in the processing.
Kicking a$$ Jason!! Well done and thanks for sharing.
Great video! Just starting out scrapping E-waste! Thanks
I love your videos and your technologies along with your explanations your give. It is very comprehensive and in depth. I learn so much and so many alternatives to tradition methods. A great job and much appreciated!
See you don’t need a script when you know what you’re doing 😁❤️✌🏼🌎 Thanks for sharing Brotha!
Excellent video great content five stars my friend thank you for sharing
That's pretty cool man hanging with the customers I'm pretty sure they were excited to see you at a lot of questions they seemed really attentive to what they were being shown and what you were explaining to them.
Awesome brother you and your TEAM make it realistic. I love your enthusiasm in not just your hobby but made it your career. On top of that your mercury recovery in your last video was crazy.
On top of the world Jason!! Wishing you all the best and thank you for sharing the adventure!!
That is so awesome how all the diff way from around the world to get the metal.
You were a young pup😂
that is so awesome to see your products being put to such efficient use. I love that its use is to recycle and repurpose materials that would otherwise just get thrown away typically because most consumers might not realize the recoverable metals on each chip board.
Great video on your system in action, thanks for sharing again Jason
That was an excellent video!
👍👍
Love to see your equipment in the real world working thanks for sharing such a wonderful video
So great to see your systems in working situations.
What a great demo tour! Your product sure produces some impressive result's for your customer's. Even though i am more of a Precious metals guy, the extraction of base metals for recycling is fascinating and important as well. Thanks for sharing Gaber😁🤙
Great work!
Jason, you never fail to amaze me!!
We have containers of electronics crap I want to recycle. This is good stuff.
I'm loving this series 👍
Lovin what your doing.
I love your content, Jason!! I especially enjoy watching the collabs with my other favorite YT content creators, like Jeff Williams and Dan Hurd! I learn something new with every video I watch. Keep up the great work!! 😉
Hey, nice that you've been in my home country (czech rep.) !!
I love your videos! Very interesting stuff to me. And a good variety of content.
Hiya Jason
thanks for the real vid, shorts are the worst, i love your videos its great and you are great at presenting them, hope you enjoyed Europe
yes man this is the way of living there..i am from romania
The fiberglass byproduct could be used as an additive for concrete.
To recycle you can heat that up and makeb2 × 4 s to build houses with. Never rotting no termites and cost virtually nothing.
ok, i am very impressed with all the different companies are doing with your machines. its much less waste going to land fills or trash dumps and a much more environmentally friendly way to try to recycle as much as possible. if i had the money from what i saw in this video i would want to invest into your company to get more people or companies to go this route.
Really enjoyed this vid!! Thanks 👍🏻
After you've run thru shaker table, do you then smelt it down to separate or will you re run shaker again??
New sub here. Thanks for keeping these metals etc from ending up in a landfill.
Excellent!
charles bridge!! takes me back, good memories there
They should try to use it in concrete. The fiberglass plastic waste. It often makes concrete stronger
e-waste recycling is the great business..
The reclaimed fiberglass and plastic can be mixed with agregate in making concrete. The fiberglass more than plastic will help reinforce concreete reducing cracks.
That was cool to watch..and listen too
Pyrolysis’s really fascinated me in that petroleum can be reclaimed and likewise reduce plastic wastes.
I really would appreciate your input on how to liquify and pour into a mold, quartz sand from 100mesh up the 1/8 minus.
Not sure if anyone has thought about it, but the waste material, if 99.9% fiberglass, could be used as insulation, or additive for construction materials such as brick or concrete.
Thanks cool dude Jason. I haven't seen this one before. 👍
That waste material can be used in next generation concrete. As fibre to strengthen and reduce weight.
ICF companies would find that handy
Is there any way to run lithium ion batteries through your system so that the cobalt copper and nickel could be recovered? You might have to do it in the middle of winter so there’s no thermal runaway cost by the lithium
I think he did a video on that a few months ago. I'll see if I can find it
Nicely done
Cool. Good luck. 👍
Hi Jason. Huge fan of your work. You wouldn't have a hammermill to pelletizer kind of thing for cardboard would you? I'm a gourmet mushroom company, and am looking into using my mushroom waste to turn cardboard recycling material into an organic byproduct.
i worked at a factory that had a roller magnet that pulled the steel out of our product it was mounted above the belt and had a wipe that took the steel off into a bucket to the side.
I imagine and hope more and more domestic customers are lining up for your products and are not shipping as much waste as we used to. Also, I can imagine there could be a composite product made with that processed fiberglass. There is obviously a much larger market for composite than five years ago.
Could the waste be used to reinforce decorative concrete tiles? Like a light aggregate? Hey Jason, don't you need to head home soon to work your mine?
Could the plastic/fibreglass waste be dried out and sold to a panel production company (or as vehicle panel repair paste?) using resin or 2 part adhesive paste as binding agents?
Great video has any of your customers found a use for the fibreglass and plastic or do you know a way to separate them
Just throwing it out there: I've invented an air classifying process that's inexpensive and simple. You basically get an insulation removal gas powered vacuum (or modified walk behind leaf blower) the next part is key- it's called "lay flat" which is clear plastic tubing that comes on a flat roll. When air is blown into lay flat it expands into a giant semi solid tube, it's used for temporary ventilation during remediation of asbestos, mold, and chemicals. You then use the suction end of the vacuum to pull in your mixed media scrap which is subsequently deposited in the giant lay flat tube in descending order of density, it's quite amazing how well it classifies. after a long run you can cut open the lay flat nearest to the vacuum and extract the highest density material, then use 3m spray adhesive to seal the tube up, or just cut off and dispose of the cut section. Just throwing out my particular air classifier invention I built on accident while doing remediation work.
I love how all the old guy owners look the same.
would have been nice to see if you had any gold or silver in that ,cool vid thanks
When processing something like that ASR at the end, would it make sense to have a magnet between the hammermill and the table to grab the ferrous stuff before trying to otherwise separate it? I'm envisioning a rather slowly rotating drum magnet with a scraper to get the iron off it.
Very interesting video.
Way cool let's go!
Would this work on recovering copper from copper ores, separating copper oxides from silica and limestone?
The plastic can be turned to fuel, the carbon leftover used as fertilizer, and after it is carbon it is also easy to recover that 0.1%. I seen a plastic recycling plant, you can even build it yourself, fairly simple however the catalizer which turns the oil into gasoline diesel, kerosene and gas is the most expensive part, rest is welded iron.
Mount Baker mountain is located above the old town of Baker on the Baker river east of Concrete washington if memory serves me close... is that where your from or how you named your company? I lived there for around fifteen years before leaving for forks washington an then to alaska. I could surely use a mill like you have.. that said, I am too old to make it go for me now... at seventy three, a torn up old man who has a mile or two in mining.. know of a good copper, silver, gold and zinc mine on the cascade river country.
Ok cool
Roof tile or asphalt additive. Even try it has a strenghtner in concrete
Very Interesting:)
I wonder if that fiberglass is too short to use in short hair fiberglass filler, or maybe in cement to strengthen it, I think a short and long hair mix works for that
There's a lady in Africa that makes bricks out of recycled plastics. That plastic/fiberglass would be great mixed into bricks, or as an additive to exterior stucco etc.
Thanks Jason…QUESTION…as steel and copper have two different melting points why can’t a waste product be ??roasted to a point where the copper melts down/off and leaves the ferrous metals deprecated ?
Thank you Mark…I was thinking of melting the copper out of electrical motors etc. that said the insulation as little as it is would still be an issue.
Brilliant you should pop into Wales before you head home
Could use the waste for insulation
Have you run all of Jeff's material yet ?
Hi could the no.4 tailings be added to resin?
Not to spam the comments but I would be interested in Jason’s or anyone else’s opinion on XRF analyzers verses atomic absorption.
did you try the artificial density layers upwards air duct separator, narrowing down air flow
just melt it all, with free solar
you will end up getting all stuff for free, no payments expected or to be paid
In the video you said this guy is trying to find a use for the plastic and fiberglass waste. Ive seen pallets and park benches and tables and other things made from plastic waste that isnt normally recycled. I think its warmed and pressed in molds to make useful items. I dont know if that is possible, its just a guess but it may be a possible solution for reuse of that material.
It's simply a repost of an older video. But in the comments of those video, someone was still answering questions about the waste product they found no usecase for.
This is pretty cool, 🤔🤓.Hmm
I wonder if you could use the waste as concrete reinforcement. Easy enough to test.
I just spoke to an environmental chemist and he suggested pyrolyzing it by heating then adding it to concrete.
This is responsible recycling. Most what we think are being recycled is shipped to third world countries and done in a way that leaves their community a disaster. We need more plastic processing all in all but being able to extract the heavies is a big step in all our futures.
I'd be happy if the plastic that gets "recycled" stopped winding up in the ocean.
@@katieandkevinsears7724 Yeah so whatever you make from it needs to either be something that will never end up by water or is broken down and plastic completely removed. It creates micro plastics but even they can be handled responsibility.
If the waste your friend is looking to find a use for is non-toxic and inert it could be used as filter media for a fluidized bed filter for aquariums and ponds that use biological filtration. Essentially it's just a scaffold for bacteria to colonize so it can be made of many things as long as it is a good substrate for the bacteria and since everything in the pond and Aquarium trade is overpriced it might be a good place to get the most money for a waste product
Do you also have some of your machines Set up in Austria?
Olive oil companies use hammer mills to crunch the fruit.
Gud vid 👍👌
I think the guy in Romania should try mixing his waste fiberglass and plastic into concrete. Seems like it would make a decent aggregate in some proportion.
Could the leftovers be melted down to make plastic sluices...Romania stop
Gold pans too
good
👍👍👍
I have 15 ounces of silver if I wanted too sell it who would I go to too get it's full weight in silver., they are all silver bars.
I'm just a little confused. You're heading over to Eastern Europe, but you're playing Appalachian hillbilly music in the first travel montage?
Huh. That waste looks like it just needs some binder, whap it in a mold and make some shingles.
Where are your machines made?
Do you need a machine?
@@zackzhao9007 No, I appreciate the offer though. Maybe in the future. What else do you offer?
@@jesscorbin5981 I understand. I will always look forward to it.
Washington I believe what he lives and operate his business
ok, the guy with the giant pile of tailings. was his plan to burn off the plastic to make fuel? that seems very toxic and bad, i got no idea what im talking about tho
Look up waste oil / tire /plastic pyrolysis it's quite safe
Hey :) maybe the fiberglass remains can be used to strengthen concrete castings? as a thank you for the proposal, maybe you can give me 0.1% of the annual profits from the sale of the fiberglass scraps ;)
to bad the plastic and fiberglass waste couldn't be put pressed lumber board for building or something.
The video won't load up to watch for days now
The green waste could (in theory) be heated and turned into bricks.