The present invention relates to self-contained roll-off waste compaction systems.
With the increasing incidence of identity theft and other misuse of private or proprietary information, the desirability and necessity of protecting such information is becoming increasingly important. In recent years, laws have been passed in various jurisdictions regulating the use and protection by businesses, health care providers, and other entities, of sensitive or private information on customers, patients, and the like. At the federal level in the United States, the HIPAA and Gramm-Leach-Bliley laws require specific measures, such as document shredding, in order to comply with the laws' provisions for protecting certain designated types of information.
Discarding sensitive documents in an unshredded state is risky, because identity thieves, investigative journalists, and other unscrupulous individuals often engage in “dumpster diving” to retrieve documents from trash dumpsters or garbage cans. Accordingly, the demand for document shredding has surged. For entities having a small amount of documents requiring shredding, personal-sized shredders that are purchased or leased may be adequate. However, for many businesses and other organizations, the large volume of documents and other materials to be shredded makes such an approach impractical. Accordingly, document-shredding service providers have arisen to meet the increasing demand for large-volume shredding.
In the early history of document-shredding services, typically the documents to be shredded were picked up by the service provider and transported to a central facility for shredding. This form of shredding service is still prevalent today. Central document shredding certainly can accomplish its intended purpose, if carried out properly. The drawbacks to central shredding include the necessity of strictly safeguarding the documents against theft or unauthorized access throughout the entire chain of custody from the time the documents are picked up from the customer to the time they are shredded, the necessity of properly documenting the chain of custody and the measures taken to safeguard the documents, and the fact that the users cannot independently verify that the documents were in fact shredded. This latter factor can give rise to a general sense of unease among some users of central shredding services.
Consequently, there is now a trend toward on-site document shredding using mobile shredders. A mobile shredder generally consists of a truck having a shredder mounted therein, and a storage volume for storing the shredded material. Typically, the users place the materials to be shredded in bins or “toters” that usually have wheels for rolling the bins to a location for pickup, such as a curbside location on a street. Mobile shredders typically have some type of bin lift and dump unit, such as those commonly employed on garbage collection trucks, for lifting the bins and emptying them into the shredder. Mobile shredding, however, also has certain drawbacks, including high labor costs, frequent pickups, high fuel costs, high truck maintenance costs, and security issues arising from delays in shredding confidential documents.
What is needed, therefore, is an efficient, low-cost alternative to the industry-standard techniques of central-facility shredding and mobile on-site document shredding.
The present invention provides an improved system and method for on-site document shredding, through the use of a self-contained roll-off compactor including a high-volume shredder. This self-contained roll-off shredding compactor permits users to collect, shred, compact and temporarily store the shredded confidential documents, using their own personnel in a cost-effective manner. A waste management service provider periodically picks up, transports and empties the roll-off shredding compactors. In a preferred embodiment, the roll-off shredding compactor is owned by the waste management service provider and leased to the user.
Thus, in accordance with one embodiment of the invention, there is provided a roll-off shredding compactor suitable for transport by a transport vehicle, comprising: a roll-off base having at least one wheel; a compaction unit mounted on the roll-off base, including a compaction chamber having an upper opening for receiving waste and a horizontal opening for ejecting compacted waste; a waste storage compartment mounted on the roll-off base and having a horizontal opening for receiving compacted waste ejected from the compaction chamber; and a shredder unit connected to the compaction unit such that shredded waste passes through the upper opening of the compaction unit into the compaction chamber.
In another embodiment of the invention, there is provided a method of operating a self-contained roll-off shredding compactor having a roll-off base, a shredding unit including a shredder motor, a compaction unit having a hydraulic ram and including a compaction chamber, and a waste storage compartment. The method comprises the steps of: activating the shredder motor in the shredder unit, such that waste that is inserted into the shredder unit is shredded by the shredder unit and deposited into the compaction chamber; deactivating the shredder motor; and cycling the hydraulic ram in the compaction unit to compact the shredded waste and eject the compacted waste into the waste storage compartment.
In yet another embodiment of the invention, there is provided a method of providing document destruction services to a user having confidential documents to be destroyed. The method comprises: (a) leasing a roll-off shredding compactor to the user; (b) delivering the roll-off shredding compactor to a site designated by the user; and (c) periodically picking up the roll-off shredding compactor at the designated site, emptying its contents, and returning it to the designated site
Having thus described the invention in general terms, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings, which are not necessarily drawn to scale, and wherein:
The present inventions now will be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which some, but not all embodiments of the invention are shown. Indeed, these inventions may be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will satisfy applicable legal requirements. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout.
A roll-off shredding compactor 100 in accordance with one embodiment of the invention is depicted in
The compaction unit 16 includes a compaction chamber 6 having an upper opening for receiving waste and a side opening for ejecting compacted waste. Waste storage compartment 34 has a corresponding side opening for receiving compacted waste ejected from the compaction chamber 6 and at least one door 36 for discharging the compacted material. The shredder unit 18 is connected to the compaction unit such that shredded waste passes through the upper opening of the compaction unit into the compaction chamber.
Shredder unit 18 may include a hopper 22 for receiving and directing waste material into the shredder unit 18. Hopper 22 may be provided with one or more panels 28 to allow access to the top of shredder unit 18 for maintenance purposes. The upper front face and top face of hopper 22 are open to front and to above, respectively, and a lip 24 is provided, upon which a waste container may be rested and tipped into hopper 22. A hopper cover 32 may also be provided to restrict access to the hopper 22 and to the shredder unit 18 when the shredding compactor is not in use. Shredder unit 18 may also include a means for opening and closing the hopper cover, which may include a manual chain or rod-based opening assembly (not shown), or more preferably, a hydraulic or electric actuator 30 or a rotary hydraulic or electric motor (not shown).
The compaction unit 16 preferably includes a horizontally-acting hydraulic piston 12 and compaction platen 8 to compact waste within the compaction chamber and to eject the waste into the waste storage compartment 34. Other piston and platen assemblies may be employed. The platen 8 is movable between a storage position (shown in
The shredder unit 18 is preferably a high-capacity single-shaft rotary shredder having a rotor with rigid cutters and a stationary counter-knife, such as those described in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. US2004/0118958A1 and in European Patent EP 419 919 B1, the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference. The rotary shredder receives material to be shredded, shreds the material into small flake-like pieces, and passes the shredded material through a screen (not shown) into the compaction chamber 6 for compaction into waste storage compartment 34. The screen has apertures suitably sized to regulate the size of the pieces of shredded material. Shredder unit 18 may be electrically powered or hydraulically powered by shredder drive 20. High-capacity single-shaft rotary shredders and shredder drives suitable for use in the invention are commercially available. For example, shredder unit 18 may be a 25-horsepower shredder, model no. ST-25, available from Shred-Tech, located in Cambridge, Ontario.
The roll-off shredding compactor 100 may further include a pull-out bar connected to the waste storage compartment for receiving a hook of a winch of the transport vehicle, so that the roll-off shredding compactor can be rolled onto the transport vehicle.
A stand-alone bin lift and dump unit 26 may also be provided. Bin lift and dump unit 26 may be any mechanism adapted to receive a waste bin at ground level or at the level of a loading dock, raise the waste bin up to hopper 22, and tip the waste bin so that its contents fall into hopper 22. Suitable bin lift and dump units are known to those of ordinary skill in the art and are commercially available, e.g., from Shred-Tech.
Hydraulic power for the compaction unit 16, shredder drive 20, the hopper cover actuator 30, and the bin lift and dump unit 26 is preferably provided by a remote hydraulic power unit (not shown) connected to hydraulic terminals 10. The remote hydraulic power unit is preferably sized to accommodate simultaneous operation of the shredder drive 20 and the bin lift and dump unit 26. Suitable remote hydraulic power units are known to those of ordinary skill in the art and are commercially available.
Control panel 14 may be provided to control the operation of the roll-off shredding compactor and the bin lift and dump unit 26. Separate controls may be provided for each of the compaction unit 16, the shredder unit 18, hopper cover actuator 30, and the bin lift and dump unit 26. In a preferred embodiment, however, control panel 14 includes a master start control and a master stop control. Activating the master start control may initiate a complete shredding and compacting sequence, which may include: (1) automatically opening the hopper cover 32, e.g., by actuating hopper cover actuator 30; (2) activating the shredder motor 20 in shredder unit 18; (3) cycling the bin lift and dump unit 26 to empty waste in the waste bin into hopper 22, whereupon the waste is shredded by shredder unit 18 and deposited into the compaction chamber 6; (4) cycling the hydraulic ram 12 in compaction unit 16 to compact the shredded waste and eject the compacted waste into waste storage compartment 34; and (5) deactivating shredder motor 20 and automatically closing the hopper cover 32, e.g., by retracting hopper cover actuator 30. In a further embodiment, the control panel may be configured, upon activating the master start control, to activate the bin lift and dump unit 26 a predetermined plurality of times (i.e., for a predetermined number of waste bins), before proceeding to activate the hydraulic ram 12 in compaction unit 16. Control panel 14 may be implemented in electronic or hydraulic form in accordance with known techniques.
When lift actuator 38 is actuated, force translation member 44 causes axle 46 to rotate, which in turn causes bin engaging member 48 and waste bin 50 to rotate around the center of axle 46. In this matter, waste bin 50 is lifted from a first position at ground level to a second position at the intake opening of hopper 22, such that waste in waste bin 50 is discharged into hopper 22. Shield member 40 serves to protect a user's hands from coming into contact with moving parts during operation. In a preferred embodiment, a lift actuator 38 and a force translation member 44 are provided on each side of roll-off shredding compactor 300, and a bin engaging member 48 is provided on each side of the waste bin 50. It should also be understood that other types and configurations of integral bin lift and dump units are known to those of ordinary skill in the art and may be used in roll-off shredding compactor 300.
In
In the embodiment shown in
In a further embodiment, the invention is a method of providing document destruction services to a user (which may include a person or a company) having confidential documents to be destroyed. The method comprises: (1) leasing a roll-off shredding compactor to the user; (2) delivering the roll-off shredding compactor to a site designated by the user; and (3) periodically picking up the roll-off shredding compactor at the designated site, emptying its contents, and returning it (or another roll-off shredding compactor) to the designated site. In a preferred embodiment, the roll-off shredding compactor may include an integral bin lift and dump unit. Alternatively, the method may include selling or leasing a stand-alone bin lift and dump unit to the entity for use with the roll-off shredding compactor.
Many modifications and other embodiments of the inventions set forth herein will come to mind to one skilled in the art to which these inventions pertain having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated drawings. Therefore, it is to be understood that the inventions are not to be limited to the specific embodiments disclosed and that modifications and other embodiments are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12201012 | Aug 2008 | US |
Child | 12703724 | US |