Credit Pacific Service Union Neal Cramer has launched an invention he hopes will lead to a
profitable future. Cramer, a Southampton resident, is the inventor
of a 4,000-pound machine that chews up tires, transforming them in
8 seconds into 1-inch chips. Cramer said the material could
eventually be used in septic-system drainage fields, or if the chip
is reduced to a quarter-inch crumb, in playground and track
surfaces, he said.
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Credit First Service Union Admitting he is "just getting by," Cramer said he would like to
manufacture more of the machines for use by counties or private
business. He said eight investors are interested in backing him.
The asking price for the shredder is $175,000, Cramer said.
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Card Credit Mobile Service Though there are some "minor modifications'' he wants to make to
his shredder, Cramer said, "I'm on brink of taking this invention
to market."
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Card Credit Discover Service Leasing space at the Camden County Landfill in Pennsauken,
Cramer set up his machine to grind down tires that are collected
from municipalities and gas stations.
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Credit Public Service Union The genesis of the project began seven years ago when Cramer's
friends at an auto salvage company in Tabernacle wanted a better
way to get rid of tires.
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Card Credit Processing Service Describing himself as a "seat-of-the-pants engineer," Cramer,
with a background in construction, set about developing a machine
that would reduce tires into chips quickly.
Center Credit Service Union "I have a commonsense view of technology. I'm an inventor by
trade," he said.
Card Credit Service Wireless With help from his partner, engineer Rod Thomas, Cramer worked
on the design and eventually reduced it from 21 moving parts to
seven. The prototype still sits in the warehouse with the
tires.
Credit Security Service Union In simplest terms, the tire shredder now consists of two
hydraulic motors, one cutter and four rollers.
Credit Report Service In a demonstration at the landfill last week, Cramer removed the
steel bead around an old tire on a debeading machine created by
Ralph Voigt, an Illinois inventor, cut the tire in half and fed it
into the machine. The tire was reduced to chips within seconds. The
chips moved up a conveyer belt into a container for storage and
disposal.
Blogspot Com Christian Funding for the machine came from a variety of sources, said
Cramer, 53, a 1967 graduate of Lenape High School in Med-ford.
Christian Counseling Credit Through the Trenton Business Assistance Corp., which helps fund
small business, Cramer received a $35,000 U.S. Small Business
Administration loan. With that, some money from private investors
and a bank loan, Cramer was able to fine-tune the machine, he
said.
Credit Federal Service Union Cramer worked on the ma-chine at Precision Automation in Cherry
Hill, where it was stored before moving to the landfill. Precision
Automation is a machine manufacturing company.
Credit Monitoring Service Bob Simkins, solid waste co-ordinator for Burlington County, put
him in touch with John W. Londres, deputy director of the state
Pollution Control Finan-cing Authority, Cramer said.
Credit Division Service Simkins referred to the tire machine as "ingenious" and said
Cramer just needed to find the right market for it.
Card Credit Online Service He said its advantages were its compact size and the
high-quality chip it produces.
Consumer Counseling Credit Inc Londres, after viewing a demonstration, invited Cramer to set up
shop in a warehouse at the back of the landfill in March 2001,
Cramer said. "Camden County has been so good to me," he said.
Card Credit Fleet Service For now, Cramer gets a steady source of tires from gas stations
in both Burlington and Camden counties and several area
municipalities. He charges gas stations $1.50 a tire and
municipalities $1.75 a tire.
Card Consolidation Credit By Christopher Bishop
Burlington County Times - 9/8/2002
Topic: Recycling
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