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Cutting windmill blades

KSSS

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Feb 27, 2005
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Idaho
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excavation
I am bidding a project to cut and haul off two windmill blades. The blades are 130' long, and made of 4" fiberglass. It is hollow until the end of the blades. They weigh 10,200 pounds per blade. Trying to come up with a way of cutting these down. The landfill wants them in 16' sections, so there are a lot of cuts. I am not excited about putting a guy on a demo saw trying to cut these. He would need a breathing protection and it would dangerous. I have a high flow asphalt cutter that might work. Shears would work but I don't have one and it would be slow. I saw some vidoes of tree shears that rotate up and down that might work. Anyone done this before and have some ideas?
 

Delmer

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Jan 3, 2013
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8,887
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WI
I wonder what an asphalt pizza cutter roller would do to them? I've seen sawmills with a bandsaw that will cut to length the whole truckload of logs on the trailer, not real practical here, and you'd need carbide to make it through. Maybe a track for the demo saw to give the operator some where safer to stand and guide the saw ? carbide teeth not abrasive wheels obviously.
 

DMiller

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Feb 21, 2010
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Hermann, Missouri
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Cheap "old" Geezer
Fbgls, BAD Juju throwing tons of dust around cutting with rotary saws. Buy a sheet of 3/4" or 1" steel set the blades on a set of concrete blocks sharpen a long edge to a dull point and drop the sheet on them with a small crane like a guillotine.

BTW, this is how they cut up scrap aircraft in Tucson.
 
Last edited:

hosspuller

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Aug 27, 2014
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1,872
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North Carolina
Fbgls, BAD Juju throwing tons of dust around cutting with rotary saws. Buy a sheet ff 3/4" or 1" steel set the blades on a set of concrete blocks sharpen a long edge to a dull point and drop the sheet on them with a small crane like a guillotine.

4 Inch fiberglass will take quite a hit to shatter.

This is an interesting project. Just another side to renewable energy. I've read that turbines getting to the end of their life are scrapped rather than rebuilt because the tax credits only apply to new installations.

Please update us on the disposal.
 

kshansen

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Mar 11, 2012
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11,160
Location
Central New York, USA
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Retired Mechanic in Stone Quarry
Fbgls, BAD Juju throwing tons of dust around cutting with rotary saws. Buy a sheet of 3/4" or 1" steel set the blades on a set of concrete blocks sharpen a long edge to a dull point and drop the sheet on them with a small crane like a guillotine.
Maybe weld up a couple guides out of some angle iron, one at each end of steel sheet and put a couple hard wood planks under the blades to protect the guillotine cutting edge.

Or for some more ideas:

 

DMiller

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Feb 21, 2010
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Hermann, Missouri
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Cheap "old" Geezer
Even with slots or holes for lifting bridle, with just the sheet 1" 4x10' looking well over 1500lbs. Dropped on edge from say ten feet I do not think the glass will sustain the damage.
 

KSSS

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Feb 27, 2005
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4,333
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Idaho
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excavation
The water jet would keep dust down. I will look into that. As these blades start to fatigue, I suspect this project will become more the norm. There are countless windmills here now and they are starting to be replaced. Wouldn't be a bad niche gig if a guy can come up with a way of doing this somewhat economically. I cant tell if its 4" all the way to the end, but it absolutely is where they bolt up to the turbine. Landfill sure was not interested in getting more of these (they have had one in the past) as they have a real problem dealing with them at the landfill, hence the 16' lengths and I have to separate the ring section where they bolt to the turbine. I was hoping for a way to do this mechanically, preferably excavator mounted, but that may not be possible.
 

Junkyard

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Jun 5, 2016
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Claremore, OK
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Field Mechanic
What about something similar to the cable setup marine salvage operations use? It’s slow so dust shouldn’t be terrible compared to a faster operating speed of an abrasive setup.

Miller might be on to something. If the blade was blocked up each side of the anticipated point of impact I bet something sharp and heavy enough would make a fairly clean break. Nothing that a little manipulation with a hoe and thumb couldn’t finish off.
 

Labparamour

Senior Member
Joined
Sep 6, 2013
Messages
734
Location
Washington
If you’re talking about a bunch, what about a forestry machine- hotsaw-type setup?
Some have blade, some saw chain...
Maybe someone on the forestry side could say if it’d work.
 

crane operator

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Mar 27, 2009
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8,315
Location
sw missouri
How big diameter are the blades where they attach to the turbine? From the one's I've been around, I was thinking they were like 4-5' diameter, but that was a really small turbine I put up as a display in the early 2000's, I know the new ones are much larger.
 

colson04

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Apr 11, 2016
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2,087
Location
Delton, Michigan
What about a gas powered cut off saw with garden hose attached for dust suppression? Or a pneumatic grinder with water hose? I've used both set ups for grinding out concrete, mortar or demo work inside buildings. They're fast, easily set up, and the hose does wonders for the dust.

Find the right blade to hack through the fiberglass and away you go.
 

kshansen

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Mar 11, 2012
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Central New York, USA
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Retired Mechanic in Stone Quarry
What about the shears that the steel scrappers use? I know years ago we had an outfit come in and chop up a bunch of scrap steel around the quarry. Their's were mounted on the end of an excavator and seem to recall they worked just like a thumb on an excavator.
 

lumberjack

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Dec 24, 2011
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1,044
Location
Columbus, MS
Since just two blades-16 cuts per blade (8 per side). Rotary saw, tyvek suit, filter mask, fire hose for dust/fiber suppression...?

I thought the same things- so much for “green.” :confused:


That's my thinking. If it's a one off job, maximize profit by embracing the suck. You're in Idaho so the temperatures should be more favorable than here.
 
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