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Atricle Dump - Environmental Solutions in Solvent Recycling That Will Save You Money
Making Money - It is All in Your Mind cost of having twelve drums of waste solvent hauled off) to $3,840 (80% of $4,800, which represents the cost of replacing the half of the solvent that remains after use). That works out to a savings of $7,440 in one year, which comes close to the cost of a small recycler. Multiply this by the large volumes generated by industry in manufacturing, painting, printing, etc. The potential for savings is enormous.Making money is 90% thought and 10% know-how. When I work with clients, I find the first major hurdle to overcome is their belief system governing money.To change your financial position, the first thing you need to do is examine your attitude, beliefs and thoughts about money. It is only the belief that money is a scarce resource that makes you feel inadequate to create more to achieve financial freedom.The belief that money is a scarce resource is fundamentally unsound. From basic economics we know this. If money was a scarce resource, economies would never increase or decrease - only the wealth distribution would change. What causes economies to grow is the relative output and productivity of the country.To cultivate “right thinking” regarding money, you need to reassure yourself that there is always plenty of money. Have you ever stopped to imagine how much money there is in the world today? How many hundreds of thousands of billions of dollars? There is definitely no scarcity of money. What you need is to change your perception of how money can be made available to you. Instead of wor If a solvent recycler is of interest to your organization, the next step in the process is finding one that suits your needs. Here are some questions to consider: 1. Is the capacity of the solvent recycler adequate to handle the volume produced? 2. Is the tank heated by steam, hot oil or by a direct electric element? (Hot surround oil is widely regarded as the best option). 3. Is the solvent vapor cooled and condensed by coolant, water or fan? (A fan is generally adequate for small units and is considerably cheaper. For large units the conditions must be considered to determine which solution is sufficient.) 4. Is the supplier capable of supporting maintenance issues if they occur? Are parts readily available? 5. Check references for reliability of the equipment in general and in your industry in specific. What is the vendor's track record? Once you determine the features of the equipment that will do the job for your organization, go out and solicit quotations from several venders as with any capital purchase. At this point it will take some intuitive judgeme The Low Cost Way to Develop Multiple-Streams of Income Distillation is the simple process of heating a mixture of ingredients until a solvent or other selected material evaporates-then cooling and condensing that vapor into a pure liquid. Alcohol has been produced this way since time immemorial and today the process is being used by large and small companies to reduce their waste streams and recover reusable products, thus saving significant cost.Cast your mind back several years, when the term 'multiple-streams of income' became an established part of the online marketing vocabulary and web-entrepreneurs began launching networks of mini-sites to sell affiliate products.Fast-forward to today and the concept of developing a number of income sources is still very relevant. Good website businesses constantly innovate, looking for new ways to make money. However setting up networks of mini-sites can be an expensive and time consuming process, so why not consider buying a single generic domain name and set up a virtual network of mini-sites using sub-folders?Setting Up Your Virtual NetworkDeveloping your virtual network is very easy. Once you have bought a generic domain name, you simply create a series of sub-folders for each of your affiliate programs. If one of your mini-sites is going to be used to sell insurance products, name the folder 'insurance'. Then create your insurance web page and save it in the insurance folder as 'index.htm' or 'index.html'. When you launch your insurance mini-sites, the address will be www.generi The ability to easily recycle solvents in-house has developed over the past 20 odd years with the advent of batch stills. These units ranging in size from 2 gallons per batch up to equipment handling one hundred gallons per batch have made it cost effective for companies to consider replacing expensive service companies. In recent times even larger units have been developed which can work either stand alone or built into a process system to reduce or eliminate the needs for full time personnel to over see the operation. These solvent recyclers save money in two ways: by recycling used solvents for reuse and eliminating most (and sometimes all) of the expense of disposing of the hazardous waste. Although even the smallest solvent recyclers cost several thousand dollars, they can easily pay for themselves in a year or two. In the case of large scale continuous operation equipment, it may be surprising to learn that the payback can easily be justified in less than one year. In fact in certain process industries the equipment vendors recommend the purchase of a solvent recycler to defray the cost of the exceedingly expensive solvents required in their equipment. When one examines the amount of waste generated in industry, and the costs associated with its handling, it becomes evident that waste has a major economic impact on the performance of most businesses. If you consider all the waste as product, then what value would that waste have to the average business. Clearly, the best solution to hazardous waste is to NOT make as much of it! Given that a business is a successful entity, that success will create more hazardous waste problems. Just as the quality of your work and throughput affect your businesss' competitive edge, so too can hazardous waste and its disposition. Thus, in-house solvent recycling must be considered as a relevant solution to the hazardous waste problem. It also must be said that solvent recyclers are good for the environment: They make it possible to use the same material over and over radically reducing disposal and saving money by eliminating or reducing purchase of new material. What are the considerations? Do you take on liability with EPA if you recycle? The answer is: yes, but it is the same liability you have with a service company. When a company buys potentially hazardous materials, they acquire cradle to grave liability. This is also acquired when using a service company. That being the case, there is no reason not to look at in-house recycling as an alternative to service company costs. There are two types of solvent recyclers: continuous and batch. Continuous solvent recyclers use in-line or auto-fill technology-that is, dirty solvent flows into one end and clean solvent comes out the other. This solution, available in varying volume capabilities, is used in industrial applications by large generators of solvent. By contrast, batch solvent recyclers distill one load of solvent at a time over a period of several hours. The principal components in any solvent recycler are a tank in which the waste is deposited, a heating system for turning the liquid part of the waste into vapor and a condenser to cool the vapor back into a liquid. The size of the tank determines the size of the solvent recycler. Methods of heating include steam, direct heat (using an electric heating element or heat plate) and indirect heat (where an oil bath surrounding the tank is heated by direct electric heat). Indirect heat is usually the preferred approach because the heating is more uniform. The condenser is most often a series of looped copper or stainless steel coils (resembling a car radiator) that are cooled by a built-in fan or surrounded by water or coolant to chill the vapor back into a liquid. Cooling by air is less expensive than cooling by water or coolant and is adequate for small, batch type solvent recyclers. Water cooled condensers may be necessary for applications where the condensing temperature is particularly low or the environment of the facility is unusually hot. The water cooled condenser will then be more efficient. Solvent recyclers are fairly unique among tools in industry in that they do almost all the work on their own. About the only thing you need to do is fill the tank (either manually for small machines or automatically for large), turn on the machine and remove the solid material that is left after the process. In the case of large automated machines, even the waste is removed without manual intervention. Any organization using solvents on a continual basis is a potential candidate for a solvent recycler. In addition, any organization using a waste hauling service would be well advised to do a payback analysis on the purchase of a solvent recycler. Here is the way to determine the degree to which you will benefit from owning a solvent recycler: First, figure what you are paying per year to have your dirty solvent or waste hauled off (generally from $100 to $400 per drum, depending upon the content and where you reside). Add this number to the cost of purchasing replacement solvent for about 80% of the volume of the sludge-or 95% of the volume of the solvent waste you are recycling with a service company. The exact percentages will vary depending on how much of the material is solid waste). Then, weigh this figure against the price of a solvent recycler and determine how long it will take for your savings to pay for it. As an example, let us say you generate one drum of waste every month; let us say that it costs $300 to have the drum hauled away and that you pay $800 once a month for two new drums of solvent. Let us also estimate that you only have 50% of the solvent to recover after use before recycling. The following calculation indicates your potential yearly savings: Add $3,600 (the cost of having twelve drums of waste solvent hauled off) to $3,840 (80% of $4,800, which represents the cost of replacing the half of the solvent that remains after use). That works out to a savings of $7,440 in one year, which comes close to the cost of a small recycler. Multiply this by the large volumes generated by industry in manufacturing, painting, printing, etc. The potential for savings is enormous. If a solvent recycler is of interest to your organization, the next step in the process is finding one that suits your needs. Here are some questions to consider: 1. Is the capacity of the solvent recycler adequate to handle the volume produced? 2. Is the tank heated by steam, hot oil or by a direct electric element? (Hot surround oil is widely regarded as the best option). 3. Is the solvent vapor cooled and condensed by coolant, water or fan? (A fan is generally adequate for small units and is considerably cheaper. For large units the conditions must be considered to determine which solution is sufficient.) 4. Is the supplier capable of supporting maintenance issues if they occur? Are parts readily available? 5. Check references for reliability of the equipment in general and in your industry in specific. What is the vendor's track record? Once you determine the features of the equipment that will do the job for your organization, go out and solicit quotations from several venders as with any capital purchase. At this point it will take some intuitive judgeme Ecommerce Web Designers Create Innovative Web Design ment.Ecommerce web designers have a bigger job to do in comparison with the average web designer. They must create design that attracts visitors and also ensure that it's highly user-friendly for visitors to browse and buy. Here are some tips that you can use.A Home Page That Sizzles Your home page is the crowd-puller. It has to offer enough sizzle to get visitors interested enough to move onto other pages on the site. Use high quality images and powerful content that brings the prospects all the benefits of your product. Develop your content around a concept and create a relevant visual presentation relevant to bring in your own brand of creativity and make your site stand apart.Impressive Copy to make Sales Ecommerce web designers know that whilst relevant, quality information is the most important element of any ecommerce website, you are in business to make sales, so your content will need copywriting to lead, persuade and close a sale at your shopping cart.The copy is your 24 hour 'salesperson' and must be interesting, informative and compelling. Dividing the copy into neat headi When one examines the amount of waste generated in industry, and the costs associated with its handling, it becomes evident that waste has a major economic impact on the performance of most businesses. If you consider all the waste as product, then what value would that waste have to the average business. Clearly, the best solution to hazardous waste is to NOT make as much of it! Given that a business is a successful entity, that success will create more hazardous waste problems. Just as the quality of your work and throughput affect your businesss' competitive edge, so too can hazardous waste and its disposition. Thus, in-house solvent recycling must be considered as a relevant solution to the hazardous waste problem. It also must be said that solvent recyclers are good for the environment: They make it possible to use the same material over and over radically reducing disposal and saving money by eliminating or reducing purchase of new material. What are the considerations? Do you take on liability with EPA if you recycle? The answer is: yes, but it is the same liability you have with a service company. When a company buys potentially hazardous materials, they acquire cradle to grave liability. This is also acquired when using a service company. That being the case, there is no reason not to look at in-house recycling as an alternative to service company costs. There are two types of solvent recyclers: continuous and batch. Continuous solvent recyclers use in-line or auto-fill technology-that is, dirty solvent flows into one end and clean solvent comes out the other. This solution, available in varying volume capabilities, is used in industrial applications by large generators of solvent. By contrast, batch solvent recyclers distill one load of solvent at a time over a period of several hours. The principal components in any solvent recycler are a tank in which the waste is deposited, a heating system for turning the liquid part of the waste into vapor and a condenser to cool the vapor back into a liquid. The size of the tank determines the size of the solvent recycler. Methods of heating include steam, direct heat (using an electric heating element or heat plate) and indirect heat (where an oil bath surrounding the tank is heated by direct electric heat). Indirect heat is usually the preferred approach because the heating is more uniform. The condenser is most often a series of looped copper or stainless steel coils (resembling a car radiator) that are cooled by a built-in fan or surrounded by water or coolant to chill the vapor back into a liquid. Cooling by air is less expensive than cooling by water or coolant and is adequate for small, batch type solvent recyclers. Water cooled condensers may be necessary for applications where the condensing temperature is particularly low or the environment of the facility is unusually hot. The water cooled condenser will then be more efficient. Solvent recyclers are fairly unique among tools in industry in that they do almost all the work on their own. About the only thing you need to do is fill the tank (either manually for small machines or automatically for large), turn on the machine and remove the solid material that is left after the process. In the case of large automated machines, even the waste is removed without manual intervention. Any organization using solvents on a continual basis is a potential candidate for a solvent recycler. In addition, any organization using a waste hauling service would be well advised to do a payback analysis on the purchase of a solvent recycler. Here is the way to determine the degree to which you will benefit from owning a solvent recycler: First, figure what you are paying per year to have your dirty solvent or waste hauled off (generally from $100 to $400 per drum, depending upon the content and where you reside). Add this number to the cost of purchasing replacement solvent for about 80% of the volume of the sludge-or 95% of the volume of the solvent waste you are recycling with a service company. The exact percentages will vary depending on how much of the material is solid waste). Then, weigh this figure against the price of a solvent recycler and determine how long it will take for your savings to pay for it. As an example, let us say you generate one drum of waste every month; let us say that it costs $300 to have the drum hauled away and that you pay $800 once a month for two new drums of solvent. Let us also estimate that you only have 50% of the solvent to recover after use before recycling. The following calculation indicates your potential yearly savings: Add $3,600 (the cost of having twelve drums of waste solvent hauled off) to $3,840 (80% of $4,800, which represents the cost of replacing the half of the solvent that remains after use). That works out to a savings of $7,440 in one year, which comes close to the cost of a small recycler. Multiply this by the large volumes generated by industry in manufacturing, painting, printing, etc. The potential for savings is enormous. If a solvent recycler is of interest to your organization, the next step in the process is finding one that suits your needs. Here are some questions to consider: 1. Is the capacity of the solvent recycler adequate to handle the volume produced? 2. Is the tank heated by steam, hot oil or by a direct electric element? (Hot surround oil is widely regarded as the best option). 3. Is the solvent vapor cooled and condensed by coolant, water or fan? (A fan is generally adequate for small units and is considerably cheaper. For large units the conditions must be considered to determine which solution is sufficient.) 4. Is the supplier capable of supporting maintenance issues if they occur? Are parts readily available? 5. Check references for reliability of the equipment in general and in your industry in specific. What is the vendor's track record? Once you determine the features of the equipment that will do the job for your organization, go out and solicit quotations from several venders as with any capital purchase. At this point it will take some intuitive judgeme What To Know Before You Submit Your Website URL into one end and clean solvent comes out the other. This solution, available in varying volume capabilities, is used in industrial applications by large generators of solvent. By contrast, batch solvent recyclers distill one load of solvent at a time over a period of several hours.Submitting your website to the major search engines should be done very carefully. Never allow a URL submission service to submit your site to thousands of search engines, simply because thousands of search engines do not exist. There are only about 500 search engines, and only around 200 are credible and actually receive traffic. URL submission services that offer this type of submission are to be avoided. The most efficient method to use when submitting your website for inclusion is to do it yourself or to hire an expert to do it manually.Before you begin to submit your website ensure that your web pages are thoroughly and properly designed using quality keywords, and most importantly your site must contain original, relevant content. Do not submit websites that are incomplete. Be sure to provide updated information about your website, keywords, etc. A simple submission to each search engine does not guarantee that your site would be immediately listed or that the ranking will be high. One important factor to remember is to include a site map which makes the crawling simple for the web robots.A The principal components in any solvent recycler are a tank in which the waste is deposited, a heating system for turning the liquid part of the waste into vapor and a condenser to cool the vapor back into a liquid. The size of the tank determines the size of the solvent recycler. Methods of heating include steam, direct heat (using an electric heating element or heat plate) and indirect heat (where an oil bath surrounding the tank is heated by direct electric heat). Indirect heat is usually the preferred approach because the heating is more uniform. The condenser is most often a series of looped copper or stainless steel coils (resembling a car radiator) that are cooled by a built-in fan or surrounded by water or coolant to chill the vapor back into a liquid. Cooling by air is less expensive than cooling by water or coolant and is adequate for small, batch type solvent recyclers. Water cooled condensers may be necessary for applications where the condensing temperature is particularly low or the environment of the facility is unusually hot. The water cooled condenser will then be more efficient. Solvent recyclers are fairly unique among tools in industry in that they do almost all the work on their own. About the only thing you need to do is fill the tank (either manually for small machines or automatically for large), turn on the machine and remove the solid material that is left after the process. In the case of large automated machines, even the waste is removed without manual intervention. Any organization using solvents on a continual basis is a potential candidate for a solvent recycler. In addition, any organization using a waste hauling service would be well advised to do a payback analysis on the purchase of a solvent recycler. Here is the way to determine the degree to which you will benefit from owning a solvent recycler: First, figure what you are paying per year to have your dirty solvent or waste hauled off (generally from $100 to $400 per drum, depending upon the content and where you reside). Add this number to the cost of purchasing replacement solvent for about 80% of the volume of the sludge-or 95% of the volume of the solvent waste you are recycling with a service company. The exact percentages will vary depending on how much of the material is solid waste). Then, weigh this figure against the price of a solvent recycler and determine how long it will take for your savings to pay for it. As an example, let us say you generate one drum of waste every month; let us say that it costs $300 to have the drum hauled away and that you pay $800 once a month for two new drums of solvent. Let us also estimate that you only have 50% of the solvent to recover after use before recycling. The following calculation indicates your potential yearly savings: Add $3,600 (the cost of having twelve drums of waste solvent hauled off) to $3,840 (80% of $4,800, which represents the cost of replacing the half of the solvent that remains after use). That works out to a savings of $7,440 in one year, which comes close to the cost of a small recycler. Multiply this by the large volumes generated by industry in manufacturing, painting, printing, etc. The potential for savings is enormous. If a solvent recycler is of interest to your organization, the next step in the process is finding one that suits your needs. Here are some questions to consider: 1. Is the capacity of the solvent recycler adequate to handle the volume produced? 2. Is the tank heated by steam, hot oil or by a direct electric element? (Hot surround oil is widely regarded as the best option). 3. Is the solvent vapor cooled and condensed by coolant, water or fan? (A fan is generally adequate for small units and is considerably cheaper. For large units the conditions must be considered to determine which solution is sufficient.) 4. Is the supplier capable of supporting maintenance issues if they occur? Are parts readily available? 5. Check references for reliability of the equipment in general and in your industry in specific. What is the vendor's track record? Once you determine the features of the equipment that will do the job for your organization, go out and solicit quotations from several venders as with any capital purchase. At this point it will take some intuitive judgeme Always Use Protection! Sell-Stops for Safe Investing tank (either manually for small machines or automatically for large), turn on the machine and remove the solid material that is left after the process. In the case of large automated machines, even the waste is removed without manual intervention.For most individuals, whether to sell a stock is the hardest decision in stock investing.It sounds simple at first: “Sell your losers and let your winners run.” Sure, obviously. But how do you know which stocks are your future long-term winners and losers? More to the point, how do you tell the difference—right now—between a stock that is only on a short-term losing streak as opposed to one which is destined to be a long term loser?Clearly, it’s easy to list your winners and losers as of right now. But that’s not what this particular decision is about. This is about future events—unknowable by definition. Even if your stock is falling in price, you don’t want prematurely to decide that you made a mistake buying it or that its prospects have reversed from bright to dim. It may not be a loser at all. It just may have hit a bad patch. Your original positive outlook on the company and its stock may be correct, and the optimum decision may be to give the stock more time to reach its profitable destination. A stock in a short-term stall can become a long-term winner.On the other hand, we all kno Any organization using solvents on a continual basis is a potential candidate for a solvent recycler. In addition, any organization using a waste hauling service would be well advised to do a payback analysis on the purchase of a solvent recycler. Here is the way to determine the degree to which you will benefit from owning a solvent recycler: First, figure what you are paying per year to have your dirty solvent or waste hauled off (generally from $100 to $400 per drum, depending upon the content and where you reside). Add this number to the cost of purchasing replacement solvent for about 80% of the volume of the sludge-or 95% of the volume of the solvent waste you are recycling with a service company. The exact percentages will vary depending on how much of the material is solid waste). Then, weigh this figure against the price of a solvent recycler and determine how long it will take for your savings to pay for it. As an example, let us say you generate one drum of waste every month; let us say that it costs $300 to have the drum hauled away and that you pay $800 once a month for two new drums of solvent. Let us also estimate that you only have 50% of the solvent to recover after use before recycling. The following calculation indicates your potential yearly savings: Add $3,600 (the cost of having twelve drums of waste solvent hauled off) to $3,840 (80% of $4,800, which represents the cost of replacing the half of the solvent that remains after use). That works out to a savings of $7,440 in one year, which comes close to the cost of a small recycler. Multiply this by the large volumes generated by industry in manufacturing, painting, printing, etc. The potential for savings is enormous. If a solvent recycler is of interest to your organization, the next step in the process is finding one that suits your needs. Here are some questions to consider: 1. Is the capacity of the solvent recycler adequate to handle the volume produced? 2. Is the tank heated by steam, hot oil or by a direct electric element? (Hot surround oil is widely regarded as the best option). 3. Is the solvent vapor cooled and condensed by coolant, water or fan? (A fan is generally adequate for small units and is considerably cheaper. For large units the conditions must be considered to determine which solution is sufficient.) 4. Is the supplier capable of supporting maintenance issues if they occur? Are parts readily available? 5. Check references for reliability of the equipment in general and in your industry in specific. What is the vendor's track record? Once you determine the features of the equipment that will do the job for your organization, go out and solicit quotations from several venders as with any capital purchase. At this point it will take some intuitive judgeme From Regular Old Expensive Cable TV to Less Expensive and So Much Better DISH with 100 Hour DVR cost of having twelve drums of waste solvent hauled off) to $3,840 (80% of $4,800, which represents the cost of replacing the half of the solvent that remains after use). That works out to a savings of $7,440 in one year, which comes close to the cost of a small recycler. Multiply this by the large volumes generated by industry in manufacturing, painting, printing, etc. The potential for savings is enormous.I used to have cable TV and I thought that was pretty swell. But, then I experienced something TV like I have never imagined before. I was at a relatives house who showed me how he could pause live T.V., watch my favortie programs without the commercials, and record my shows automatically without any effort on my part.My world was changed forever. You may be thinking that this is terrible and that T.V. watching should never be encouraged. That I should get out more and get more excercise. Well, let me tell you something. Since I have had the DISH with the DVR, I do! I watch less TV because I don't sit through commercials and I don't just turn on the tube sit around waiting for something good to come on. Instead I turn on the TV and go straight to my recorded food network shows, or recorded gardening shows.That's all I like to watch, but I am rarely watching T.V. during the hours of the programs that I most like. That's the beauty of the DISH and the DVR that comes packaged with it. You may have heard the word TIVO used in place of DVR. Well, they are very similar machines that do essen If a solvent recycler is of interest to your organization, the next step in the process is finding one that suits your needs. Here are some questions to consider: 1. Is the capacity of the solvent recycler adequate to handle the volume produced? 2. Is the tank heated by steam, hot oil or by a direct electric element? (Hot surround oil is widely regarded as the best option). 3. Is the solvent vapor cooled and condensed by coolant, water or fan? (A fan is generally adequate for small units and is considerably cheaper. For large units the conditions must be considered to determine which solution is sufficient.) 4. Is the supplier capable of supporting maintenance issues if they occur? Are parts readily available? 5. Check references for reliability of the equipment in general and in your industry in specific. What is the vendor's track record? Once you determine the features of the equipment that will do the job for your organization, go out and solicit quotations from several venders as with any capital purchase. At this point it will take some intuitive judgement to determine which vender can provide the right solution. More times than not, price should not be the determining factor in the acquisition. Do the homework and you will make the correct choice. Remember, as with all capital purchases, once you purchase a solution you will have to live with it for a long time. On the good side, the organization who chooses to recycle gains several benefits. The reduction of the waste stream is obvious as is the cost savings. The green image that accrues to the company is valuable to its position as a good neighbor in the community. It is hard to put a value on this aspect, yet its benefit is great. With society's increasing concern for protecting the environment, it only makes sense (both for the sake of the environment and for the cost savings) to recycle your used solvents. Regardless of the size of the equipment needed, the decision to recycle in-house almost always shows a positive return on investment. With ever more difficult conditions to earn a profit, more and more organizations are turning to solvent recyclers to reduce cost and save money.
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