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Convey the Dirt with a Conveyor Belt-Equipped Screener

A project is under way that requires digging, but the dirt must be moved quickly away from the immediate spot. A portable screener is needed that will do this, but the work is not being done by a large industrial company. For such a project, such as building a house, fixing a dirt road on the property, etc., EZ Screen sells a portable version of an industrial screener that has a built-in conveyor belt. With this, the screened rock, dirt, or whatever it is that needs to be shipped out of the way, can be moved using an 8 foot high conveyor.
 
Without a conveyor belt, topsoil screening machines dump the screened soil onto the ground, in place. The EZ Screen 750 has an 18 inch wide continuous belt conveyor. This moves the extra dirt away from the immediate site, so there is room to work. At a site with limited space, this helps because other equipment can be placed nearby and the screener does not have to be moved around as much. Nearby snow banks, cliffs, or other property can limit a worksite’s ground coverage. So, having a screening machine with a conveyor belt becomes a useful tool.
 

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Noting the Differences in Scales




For all of my industrial planning projects, I look to aerial photography as the best way to receive the data I need to plan my spots correctly.

The reason that aerial data is so effective is because contrary to the way the earth is believed to be, the land is constantly changing. Ongoing development makes every area of the earth different at all times. For example, I may look at a previously drawn map and assume that there is a house on the corner of 85th and Greenwood. But if I actually go to that street, I may find that there is now a business, or perhaps there was a fire the month before and that area is completely barren.

That is why up-to-date aerial mapping is so important. Things change, and the only way to know that these things changed is if you get new data and images done. Also, you can never trust how exact any of the previously drawn maps are, because you were not there when they were taken. The difference in scale in incredibly important, and if the scales are off because the previous company did not do the specifications correctly, then the data is automatically flawed.

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