
The exhibit by CP Group of Cos., San Diego, at booth No. 2247 at WasteExpo 2016, June 7-9, in Las Vegas will be made entirely of material recovery facility (MRF) equipment.
The booth is a two-story 1,432-square-foot structure designed and built by CP Group at its manufacturing facility in San Diego. The company designs and manufactures MRFs and recycling equipment for the waste and recycling industry.
“We are excited to showcase the first-ever tradeshow booth made entirely of material recovery facility equipment and infrastructure,” says Ashley Davis, CP Group director of sales and marketing. “It is the best way to show customers our equipment and manufacturing capabilities.”
The booth, made from CP’s own platforms and handrails, is designed to showcase the precise fit and finish of the company’s MRFs, infrastructure and screens, according to the company.
“Rather than telling people about how well-built our MRFs are, we’re showing them,” Davis says. “We are extremely pleased with the results and look forward to hosting guests on our observation deck during our CP happy hour.”
CP will showcase a live demo unit running various patented discs: CP Cam-DiscTM used in the glass breaker screens (chromium alloy style); the CPScreenTM (rubber style); and the brand new patented CP Helical-DiscTM, which was patented earlier this year and will be introduced to the market at WasteExpo.
The CP Helical-Disc disc was created to eliminate wrapping on screens while achieving aggressive 2D/3D separation in multiple applications, CP Group says. The new disc will be placed in the CPScreen frame and will be used to segregate 2D from 3D material.
The booth will showcase a full-size CPScreen. The 120-inch-wide 26-rotor CPScreen will be used to show customers the CP SyncDriveTM and to demonstrate its safety features, including the safety access door, the folding floor and the locking rotors.
CP Group manufactures screens that use belt drives instead of chain drives. According to the company, CP SyncDrive belts are more precise with a longer wear life than chains and sprockets. They don’t require any oilers or tightening and are much quieter during operation, according to the company.
The second-story of CP’s booth has a private office that is constructed out of the same materials as a MRF sort cabin. The modular office enclosure was donated by Porta King, a supplier of sort cabins in the waste and recycling industry.
CP Group comprises CP Manufacturing, Krause Manufacturing, MSS Inc. and Advanced MRF and provides a variety of sort solutions worldwide, including MRFs, retrofits, audits, consulting, and engineering services. Custom turnkey sorting and material handling systems are designed, installed, and serviced by CP Group for residential recycling, commercial and industrial, municipal solid waste, engineered fuel, construction and demolition and electronic scrap processing.
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