Recyclage Mag

Recycling products

Follow @textadsin

Archive for the ‘recycled’ Category

Recycling human hair

without comments

There are lots of great uses for human hair. Instead of throwing it away, it can be put to good use around your home. In fact, using cut hair for jewelry, clothes, sculptures, fertilizer and even furniture is not very uncommon, a practice. It can be used again for your pets, made into clothing, and even provides soft bedding and shelter for the birds. If you have birds nesting in your garden, you can leave the hair for them to use as a building material. Hair clippings of humans can be used to deter snails from your prized vegetables. Human hair can be used to keep pests out of your garden. One can leave shed out hair and hair clippings around the garden to deter skunks, rats, rabbits and other animals. Human hair was once saved to stuff things such as pin cushions, seat cushions, and pet toys. One can easily make small stuffed items from used hair and that is a great way to use it without having to buy new materials. Woven hair can be used to make jewelry products. Human hair dresses are readily available, and it is a fine example of recycling and putting into use of human hair.

However, now even smaller quantities of human hair, including much of what used to end up in the barbershop’s wastebasket are being recycled into a variety of gardening products that encourage healthy plant life and naturally deter unwanted pests in the garden. In addition to that human hair can be composted as well. Many people primarily collect, sanitize, and market human hair to be used as a consumer good. Our recycled hair products will be targeted toward the home gardener who will benefit from hair’s numerous elemental characteristics and its strong human scent. Clippings of human hair contain an extremely high nutrient value which, when utilized and mixed with potting soil, will produce a higher quality plant food and soil enhancer than what is currently on the market. Human hair, in common with wool, silk, and other organic materials, has very high nitrogen content, and in the soil, nitrogen encourages tissue growth. If the sweepings from a barber shop were regularly applied to a compost heap, an enormous amount of nitrogen could be recovered.

Written by recy

April 23rd, 2013 at 12:04 am

Toxins in electronics waste

without comments

Classic tube televisions hold between 4 and 8 pounds of lead per television. If not recycled, this lead ends up in landfills, potentially leaking into water and surrounding soil. Older computer monitors also contain lead and the fluorescent lamp in the screen contains mercury. The circuit board contains both lead and cadmium, which is a human carcinogen. Even though recycling electronics is preferable to simply throwing them in the garbage, you can prevent the disposal process altogether by reusing items. By keeping an outdated computer monitor or donating a TV to a local charity, you can help prevent environmental damage while contributing to your community at the same time. Buying things we simply do not need might be the biggest cause for an e-waste problem. It is really important for us to just stop and ask ourselves if we need a gadget or electronic item before we buy it. We really need to activate that voice in our heads that talks to us and prevents us from buying electronic items we do not need. E-waste is the term used to describe discarded electronics and electrical products. In the past few decades, the world’s demand for gadgetry has gone through the roof and, inevitably, more waste has started to accumulate. As the bustling economies of China and India modernize and follow more Western trends, the worldwide generation of e-waste has hit astronomical proportions.

Written by recy

March 1st, 2013 at 4:00 am

Recycling electronic waste-I

without comments

With the plethora of new electronic devices produced each year, consumers need to dispose of their obsolete products faster than ever. In order to slow the environmental effects of poor waste management, it is important to know how to recycle electronics properly. Electronic devices contain harmful toxins such as lead, arsenic and mercury. If electronics end up in a dump or land fill, they release these toxins into the environment. Many electronic devices contribute to toxic waste when disposed of incorrectly.

Also, there are some of the chemicals and compounds used in household products that have lot of harmful effects. Arsenic may disrupt cell communication and interfere with the triggers that cause cells to grow, possibly contributing to cardiovascular disease, cancer and diabetes if someone is exposed in chronic, low doses. Cadmium affects your body’s ability to metabolize calcium, leading to bone pain and severely weakened, fragile bones. Chromium can cause skin irritation and rashes and is potentially carcinogenic. Copper can irritate the throat and lungs and affect the liver, kidneys and other body systems. Lead poisoning can cause a whole slew of health problems including the impairment of cognitive and verbal activity. Eventually, lead exposure can cause paralysis, coma and death. Nickel is carcinogenic in large doses.

Written by recy

January 8th, 2013 at 2:45 am

Advantages of recycling

without comments

Recycling cloth and textiles saves energy and reduces pollution that would result from transportation and particularly the dyeing and color fixing processes applied to new, raw cloth. In particular, recycling really helps in this case by saving water, which is used in large quantity to wash and treat raw cloth. Recycling textiles via donation, benefits charities, and provides affordable clothes for 3rd world countries. In other words it raises revenues for charity, provides clothes in world disaster areas. A lot of economic savings can be done and it also reduces household expenditure in a repressed declining economy. When it comes to textiles and clothing, people perceive that manufacturing clothes is a one way route. Clothes are manufactured, sold, worn out and thrown away. This conception is fast changing as a result of the increase in public awareness with regards recycling clothes. High fashion and corporate greed have both contributed to this notion. Consumers in developed countries have an unending appetite for fast fashion and it is us who need to change. Recycling clothes and accessories is one such initiative that aims to change people’s mindset about this alarming trend and establish clothes as a commodity. Clothes recycling are not new to the world. Unlike manufacturing, recycling clothes is usually undertaken manually. The process includes collection, repair and distribution of clothing and accessories. This in turn creates more jobs in the system. With modern collection and distribution systems, clothes recycling have been taken to another level. Our online portal offers users the ability to trade clothes collection online and make quick money. People in need of fast cash can trade in their unwanted clothes through a very easy to use interface. Besides recycling clothes, there are other uses for used textiles. Rags/wipers can be made out of clothes that are no fit for wearing. Dedicated factories have been set up by large textile houses that make use of used clothes to make rags and in turn earn more money. This also reduces the carbon footprint of companies that otherwise would have to thrown clothes in landfill sites. Such capitalism is good for the economy.

Written by rbd

December 5th, 2012 at 6:34 am

Reuse of recycled clothes

without comments

Clothing items that cannot be sold on or repaired can go through another recycling method. This involves collecting post-industrial waste, cloth and scraps left over from fabric and garment manufacture, and post-consumer waste – used clothes and other household textiles. All the fabric is sorted according to type, color and grade, and then shredded into fibers. The product, known as shoddy, can, if it is of a high grade, be mixed with new fibers and then spun for weaving or knitting. At this stage, designers and manufacturers are also stepping in and making clothes from this product, making a virtue out of its recycled nature. You should look out for these recycled products in the high street. Low grade shoddy can be used as carpet underlay, padding for mattresses and stuffing for cushions, amongst other uses. This process of recycling cloth, textiles and fibers reduces waste being put in landfill sites. Due to the ease and creativity of this process, recycling of such materials has been in place a long time, and a culture of easy disposal of clothes has not developed, as it has with other materials mentioned on other pages here, such as plastic, glass and paper.

Written by rbd

November 26th, 2012 at 6:31 am

Recycling clothes

without comments

Recycling is one of the most rapidly and successfully evolving procedures of environmental conservation. In fact, it is among the most talked about issue these days and the increasing number of people is participating in recycling waste in varied ways. People have realized the importance to save the environment and thus they are trying their ever best possible move to use the items that are waste for them now in alternative ways. Recyclable products like glass, metal, paper and plastics are thus collected and then transported to the concerned facilities for converting them in finished products of alternative use. Recycling clothes is just as important as recycling plastics and aluminum. Millions of clothes and accessories are dumped every year into landfills which otherwise could have been used by people in need. Recycling clothes is a great way for frugal families to save money.

Written by rbd

November 25th, 2012 at 7:01 am

SEO Help For YOUR Site or Cause!

without comments

Let’s face it, SEO is more important than ever! Quality, huge variety of SEO and social media services priced to sell, small, family owned: www.seocharging.com

Written by brainpowerneuromarketing

September 10th, 2012 at 2:46 am

www.TrendSation.com

without comments

www.trendsation.com is looking for new writers for our burgeoning sections on site, twitter,and on facebook! What’s trending online now trendsation.com

Written by brainpowerneuromarketing

September 10th, 2012 at 2:39 am

Steel scrap offer

without comments

EISENHARDT is pleased to elevate the updated offers of the steel scraps in bulk and containerized cargo from Central / North / South America and Central Europe.

The material is clasified under the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries codes and can be inspected by any international quality surveyor at opener´s account.

Also we are sending confidentially recent Bill of Lading of material shipped by EISENHARDT to China from Australia in loose bulk and some other past shipments as our reference. Our past performance is strictly confidential to give a confident position about our Co. and it is not to be circulated to any 3rd party without our written authorization for intelectual and property rights of the parties involved.

A contract for 12 months can be signed, renewable by mutual agreement, with a 12 times revolving L/C or a SBL/C for the value of 2-3 month shipments.

The offers are based on remaining unsold physical stocks and future stocks with a long term Contract. A contract for 12 months can be signed, renewable by mutual agreement, with a 12 times revolving L/C or a SBL/C for the value of 2-3 month shipments.

In order to support the reliability of both Corporate Offers, once the end buyer / importer´s LOI or trader`s LOI and Bank Capability Letter is received accepting the sale terms, the following documents will be sent along with the Contract:

AQSIQ Certificate (if destiny is China). if it is supplied by our side, it´s cost is + 2,5 USD/MT over the rates
CCIC Inspection (If China) acceptable at opener´s account.
Recent dated photos of the product as per buyer´s request.
Past Bill of Ladings of material exported.

To initiate the purchase it is required the end buyer / importer´s LOI/BID or trader`s LOI and BCL issued to EISENHARDT (including complete banking information) in order to prepare the Contract with the offer for the specific requirement.

The financial instrument for the payment of the operation must be issued or confirmed by a 1st class international bank.

Written by rbd

July 4th, 2012 at 1:04 pm

Posted in products,recycled

Cotton waste recycling system

without comments

Truetzschler +LTG Cotton waste recycling system

YOM 2005. 1500 kgs./hr. capacity

Installed in 2006, but never used. The line can be used to recover cotton fibre from ginning waste. Stopped on mill floor in running condition.

Location Russia.

Price: on request

a) Bale opener Blendomat BDTO19/2300 1 nos.

Width 2300 mm. — 23 m.

Blend commander with colour monitor

Double magnet MRO

b) Condenser LVSA 1 nos.

c) Bunker E-BX 1 nos.

d) Bale opener BX 1 nos.

e) Extended feeding table A – BX 1 nos.

Width 1600 mm. length 1980 mm

f) H-BX

g) STB heavy material separator 1 nos.

h) Foreign material detector SCB 1 nos.

i) Splitter VT2

j) Condenser LVSA/MFC 2 nos.

k) Pre-cleaner MAXI-FLO MFC 2 nos.

l) Splitter VT2 2 nos.

m) Waste-o-mat 4 nos.

n) Filtration system LTG

a. Filter drum with pre-filter

b. TFB + TVM 1 nos 0,37 kW

c. Radial Fan. 1 nos. 110 kW

d. Feeding Fan 1 nos

o) Fibre collection drum FKC

p) Cyclone separator ZSA 2 nos.

q) waste briquetting press 2 nos.

a. (30 kW, 300 Bar pressure , 240 briquettes/hour)

r) prefilter for waste 2 nos.

s) waste collection from pre-futer FKA 2 nos.

t) fibre collection unit for briquetting press FKA

u) fully automatic baling press (bale weight 450 kg. max) 2 nos.

a. motor 18.5 kW

b. baling pressure 35 tons

c. Automatic bale tying

d. Electronic controls

v) Electronic control panel

From S&D Limited

Written by rbd

April 23rd, 2012 at 11:59 am

Posted in machinery,recycled