Photo courtesy of KPI-JCI & Astec Mobile Screens
Braxling & Braxling is a second-generation contracting company serving all of northwest Oregon. Photo courtesy of KPI-JCI & Astec Mobile Screens.

Forging a new path in Oregon

A contract crusher circumvents territorial obstacles with a pair of high-performing portable crushers.

Photos courtesy of KPI-JCI & Astec Mobile Screens
Braxling & Braxling is a second-generation
contracting company serving all of northwest
Oregon. Photos courtesy of KPI-JCI & Astec
Mobile Screens.

Making the trek up the steep, mountainous terrain of Tillamook, Oregon, is no easy feat – especially when you’re maneuvering 111,000 pounds of solid iron and steel.

The narrow, winding logging roads and tight corners make hauling equipment a serious challenge for contractors who crush base for roads used by logging mills, timber companies and others in the forestry industry.

For Ron Braxling, owner of Braxling & Braxling, equipment size became the primary consideration when updating his old rubber tire plant. With roughly 20 jobs performed annually for the forestry industry, he needed a compact but powerful plant that would allow him to easily move from location to location, crush within a tight footprint, handle diverse types of difficult material and make a variety of products – all while meeting a stringent state spec.

“We have different needs than many contractors, as we don’t just easily pull into a quarry and start crushing,” Braxling says. “Logging roads typically follow the outside of the hillside, and there are natural barriers and restrictions because of the culverts and streams you encounter. That poses challenges when you are trying to haul a crusher to get to the pit.

“Not to mention, we often encounter material that is marginal,” he adds. “We might process clay or stickier material – we don’t go into many environments where we consistently have good, hard basalt rock. We have to make sure to mix that material up for a high-quality, consistent end product.”

Braxling found his answer for a compact but high-performing crusher in the GT200CC and FT200CC, two track-mounted, closed-circuited cone plants from Johnson Crushers International (KPI-JCI & Astec Mobile Screens).

Photos courtesy of KPI-JCI & Astec Mobile Screens
The GT200CC and FT200CC, pictured above,
are two track-mounted, closed-circuited cone
plants.

“We were the first contractors in North America to try the GT200CC after its launch,” he says. “JCI has been so good to work with. They ask for feedback regularly and look for things to improve to better meet our needs, and work with us to implement those design changes.”

Built on passion

Braxling & Braxling is a second-generation contracting company serving all of northwest Oregon. Launched in 1961 by Ron’s father, Art, Braxling & Braxling was built behind a passion for hauling materials and working in the woods. Today, the company has about 30 employees. In addition to its mobile contracting services, Braxling & Braxling owns two commercial quarries in Newport and Tillamook, Oregon. The company primarily makes road base products including 3/4-in., 1-in., 1-1/2-in., 3-in. and 4- to 6-in., as well as concrete recycle material.

Braxling spent the past three years investing in track-mounted equipment from KPI-JCI & Astec Mobile Screens, selecting equipment for its mobility, performance capabilities and user-friendly design.

The GT200CC uses a 1200LS cone crusher and is capable of producing up to 385 tph. Its slightly bigger cousin, the FT200CC, is still just 12-ft. x 61-ft., 3/4-in. long, and features a Kodiak Plus K200+ cone crusher, with a capacity of up to 400 tph.

Both cone plants are engineered with a unique roller bearing design that generates higher efficiencies and can reduce operating expenses by up to 50 percent, according to Stephen Whyte, product manager of track-mounted equipment for KPI-JCI & Astec Mobile Screens.

The plants use a two-stage system, allowing Braxling to meet spec, whether he’s making a 3/4-in. or 3-in. product.

“Our track cones allow us to make a really broad range of products with less equipment while minimizing setup and transport time,” Braxling says. “The ability to change the settings on the fly is really beneficial to us, and we also appreciate the remote control aspect so we can have fewer guys on the ground.”

When on a contract crushing job, rock is first drilled and blasted by McCallum Rock Drilling. Braxling then builds a pad and moves equipment in – typically an excavator, the FT2650, GT200CC and the FT3660 track-mounted conveyor. Within a day, the site is set up and rock is ready to be crushed, Braxling says.

After being blasted, material is loaded by excavator or loader into the FT2650 jaw crusher. The company typically uses an excavator to better control and sort the mix, Braxling notes. Next, the material is run through the GT200CC cone crusher. Because the track plant is closed circuited, the material can be rerun to bring it to spec if needed. The material is then stockpiled using the FT3660, a 36-in. x 60-ft. track-mounted radial stacker.

“With the jaw, we can close our closed-side-setting and get down to a 3-in. rock, but the cone gives us the versatility to get down to a 3/4-in.-minus,” Braxling says. “The closed-circuit configuration gives us the ability to control our finished products. With an open circuit plant, you can get elongated pieces or a few stragglers that don’t meet spec. With the spec we have to meet, you have to produce a lot of fines a lot of the time, and there aren’t a lot of natural fines here. We wouldn’t be able to do this without having the closed-circuit plants.”

Continued relationship

Photos courtesy of KPI-JCI & Astec Mobile Screens
Making the trek up the steep, mountainous
terrain of Tillamook, Oregon is no easy feat.

Braxling & Braxling’s relationship with JCI continued to grow in the four decades since Art Braxling first invested in an ElJay cone plant. The company also owns an FT2650 track-mounted Pioneer jaw crusher, a 2436 Pioneer jaw crusher and a FT3660 track-mounted radial stacker from Kolberg-Pioneer Inc., JCI’s sister company.

“We’ve carried on with JCI because of their service,” Braxling says. “For me, the true test comes after the sale. I appreciate that the equipment is made locally in Eugene and that my team has a great rapport with all of the guys at that facility – all the way from the top down. We know that every piece of equipment is going to encounter troubles at some point, but it’s how you fix the problem and how long it takes that makes the difference to us.”

Supporting an American-made company has also been a deciding factor for Braxling, who flies American flags on his jaw crushers as a patriotic gesture.

“It’s a major factor for us,” he says. “We try to steer away from overseas parts and products. We are very conscientious about choosing American-made.”

John Hereher, operations manager at Braxling & Braxling, also values the local PRO training opportunities his team receives through KPI-JCI & Astec Mobile Screens. The crew learned to perform its own liner changes during a service training event last year, which saved significant time and money.

“The training was extremely beneficial to teach us more about the cone plants,” Hereher says. “We’ve realized how easy liner changes are to do on the Kodiak cone crusher. It’s an extremely user-friendly machine.”

The training also helped the crew form important relationships with the team at the factory, he says.

“Any of our guys can call down there any time they have a problem and someone will answer the phone and help troubleshoot and guide them to a solution,” Hereher says. “It’s invaluable.”

After years of collaboration, the relationships are more than just business – they’ve become friends he can count on in a moment of need, Braxling explains.

Braxling recalls one memorable experience when the GT200CC went down and JCI engineering manager Gary Heesze, visited the site with engineer Tom Furrer to help troubleshoot the problem. What Braxling witnessed stays with him to this day.

“Here are two guys who are white-collar engineers with an exceptionally broad range of knowledge and mechanical ability,” Braxling says. “I finally left at 1 a.m., but these guys stayed on and were there at 6 a.m. in the pouring rain working on the equipment.

“Their dedication and fortitude amazed me,” he adds. “For those guys in their positions to be that dedicated to stay in the muck and rain trying to solve our issues – it spoke volumes about who we were working with.”


Information for this article courtesy of KPI-JCI & Astec Mobile Screens