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SPALECK supports Rhede comprehensive school

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Mann mit Brille und weißem Hemd vor blauem Hintergrund.

From Rainer Elfring

Published: 14.02.2018

Updated: 14.02.2018

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Looking forward to working together: (from left) Carsten Sühling and Karin Spaleck from SPALECK, Melanie Vennemann from the IHK and Achim Schäffer and Norbert Schmidt from Rhede Comprehensive School.

Bocholt/Rhede – Rhede Comprehensive School and Spaleck GmbH & Co. KG in Bocholt are official cooperation partners in the “School-Company Partnership” project of the North Westphalia Chamber of Industry and Commerce (IHK). Representatives from the company and the school signed an agreement to this effect on February 7, 2018.

The main aim of the IHK project is to support pupils in their career orientation and companies in securing the next generation of skilled workers. “Many young people have only vague ideas about vocational training and the good career opportunities it offers,” explains IHK project employee Melanie Vennemann. Companies like SPALECK are ideally suited “to show pupils the diversity and reality of the world of work, with its opportunities, but also its requirements,” Vennemann continues.

SPALECK is one of the world’s leading manufacturers of recycling technology and a supplier to the metalworking industry in North Rhine-Westphalia. The company offers a dual study program and six apprenticeships, for example as a technical product designer, industrial mechanic and construction mechanic.

Head of Human Resources Karin Spaleck: “For us as a fifth-generation Family-owned business, training young people is still something very special: it is the common basis for success for the future of our trainees and our company.”

However, the “School-Company Partnership” is not just about career guidance. With this project, the IHK also wants to support companies in securing the next generation of skilled workers, explains IHK project employee Vennemann. “The key to success is getting to know each other personally: the pupils recognize their interests and the company finds talents that are worth promoting, even if the report card initially says otherwise.”

Managing Director Carsten Sühling emphasizes the need to leave no talent undiscovered in view of the declining number of school leavers: “Early and direct contact with pupils helps us to discover talented and motivated young people time and again and to promote them as part of their training.” According to Sühling, this is the only way a company can remain competitive.

Principal Achim Schäffer emphasizes: “The IHK project offers our students, but also the teachers, the opportunity to get to know companies up close and get excited about training occupations and Efficiency in the long term. Personal contact is established in teaching units with SPALECK employees, which makes it easier for pupils to find their way into working life.”

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About the author

Mann mit Brille und weißem Hemd vor blauem Hintergrund.

Rainer Elfring

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Frequently asked questions

The precise design of a tension-shaft screening machine is always tailored to the recycled material. Factors such as the composition of the input material, its moisture content, contaminants, throughput requirements, and the recycling goals associated with the input material form the basis for this. Working with you, we define screening sizes, purity requirements, and throughput rates, and use this information to configure the exact machine settings—from screening panels to amplitude and machine features such as the SPALECK FineSideCOVER (FSC) or our MultiDECK technology with a split push rod. Learn more here about our ModularDESIGN+ concept, which we use to find the optimal screening machine for your material. We’d be happy to test the respective recycling material together with you free of charge at the SPALECK TestCenter.

Precise screening of the fine fraction results in clearly defined particle sizes. For example, if the fine fraction ranging from 0 to 10 mm is reliably screened out, downstream sorting equipment—such as eddy current separators, NIR sorters, sensor sorters, and X-ray sorters—operates more reliably and efficiently as a result. In addition, the system’s cleaning requirements are reduced, and higher material purity levels can be achieved. You can see a good example of the benefits of a tensioned-shaft screen in the reference video on municipal solid waste processing at our Swedish customer Tekniska verken. The video demonstrates how a SPALECK tension-shaft screen reduces the load on the downstream eddy current sorters and NIR sorting processes. You can find all the details about the project here.

The service life of screening mats for Flip-Flow screening machines depends heavily on the recycled material, the Recycling process, and factors such as the abrasiveness of the material stream. In many recycling applications, very long service lives are possible. Thanks to our bolt-free, modular clamping system, individual screening mats can be replaced quickly and easily as needed. You can see how this works in the video on our landing page for tension-shaft screen machines. You can get a competitive quote for replacement screening mats through our spare parts service.

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