Throwback Thursday! A Horizontal VMI Dredge Working!
Throwback Thursday! A Horizontal VMI Dredge Working!
Did You Know? VMI Dredges are used to facilitate operations in power plants. Dredging is used to remove sedimentation in nuclear power plant water intake structures. Coal fired plants create waste in the form of ash. Dredging is used to remove ash from storages ponds for disposal. VMI dredges are a great way to clean up the coal ash and have been utilized for this purpose for many years.
Contact us to learn more! We offer rentals and sales of our dredges and dredging equipment!
Did You Know?
Sand is the most mined substance in the world. The current size of the sand mining market in the United States is slightly over a billion dollars per year
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dredge extension kit to improve dredging depth and maximize dredging capabilities.
VMI Dredge in Buffalo, New York
VMI Dredge in Cancun, Mexico
This is our MD-820CS Dredge
Made in America, Used Everywhere
Underwater excavation projects require reliable, efficient, and high-quality dredges. Look no further than VMI Dredges for all your dredge supply needs. We offer the most versatile dredge rentals in North America. From our facility in Central Oklahoma, we can easily service any customer in the lower 48 states with worldwide options for customers outside of North America.
VMI has manufactured dredges from Oklahoma since our beginning in 1972. We continue to manufacture the highest quality, most reliable and best overall performing dredges in the world. Still owned and operated under the same family name, we maintain our dedication to quality as we manufacture dredges and dredging equipment for rental units.
Whether reclaiming capacity of retention ponds, recovering precious materials such as sand and gold from rivers, or restoring beach heads from natural erosion, our dredgers can help get the job done.
SINCE 1972 OUR TEAM OF PROFESSIONALS HAVE CONSTRUCTED SUPERIOR DREDGES WITH WORLD-CLASS WORKMANSHIP. WITH MACHINES REACHING MORE THAN 25,000 HOURS OF SERVICE VMI'S QUALITY IS SECOND TO NONE.
Mission Accomplished
The dredging operation at the Cushing High School Lake is complete and the "mission accomplished" said one of the individuals watching as the huge dredging equipment was loaded on a truck and taken back to the company who donated it for the project. What was the mission? To restore the lake to its original depth which will improve the fish habitat and clearity, and simply to beautify the body of water near the new Cushing High School field house.
The eight-week project came in under cost - way under cost. In fact it is the generosity of a local manufacturer that made the project possible at all. The dredging machine is one of several owned and manufactured by VMI.
Gene Maitlen, who founded the company here several years ago, was on hand to see the machine loaded. Seeing dredges loaded on trucks is common place for him. The company he now operates with his sons, has shipped their equipment all over the world. This one was being shipped just across Highway 33.
Several of these smaller machines are leased by the day or month for between $1000 to $2000 per day. The Maitlens made this one available at no cost to their community. "This was the key in getting this done," said Dale Cotham who helped pull it all together. In turn, the school provided the operator and Lionel Harris of Harris Oil provided the fuel.
"This is one of the real benefits of living in a small town," said Cotham. "People will step up to the plate to get something done." The lake is now at its original depth of 15 foot in the deepest part and an average of seven foot, overall.
The Bank of Cushing also will help see the lake is restocked with game fish. Jim Shields said the Cushing Vo-Ag class plans to make restocking a project. "None of this could have happened wit out the help of others."
Operator Kenneth Ward waved goodbye to the machine. The dredging, which made statewide news when he turned up a purse that had been missing for 30 years, had been an adventure for him. He also found old tires, hubcaps, fishing poles and lures and even a Texas license plate. "I also found some grass carp teeth," Ward said. "At least that's what people tell me they are," he said. "Pretty weird." Some of the carp along with game fish were victims of last summer's drought.
An agreement made with the City of Cushing years ago when the city gave McLaury's Pond and surrounding property to the school calls for the school to maintain the body of water for use of the public. Ward was trained to operate the dredge by Randy Maitlen. The job took about eight weeks.
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