Skip (container)
A skip (UK English) or dumpster[1][2] (US and Canadian English)[notes 1] is a large open-topped waste container designed for loading onto a special type of lorry (truck). Instead of being emptied into a garbage truck on site, as a wheelie bin is, a skip is removed, or replaced by an empty skip, and then tipped at a landfill site or transfer station.
Typically skip bins have a distinctive shape: the longitudinal cross-section of the skip bin is either a trapezoid or two stacked trapezoids. The lower trapezoid has the smaller edge at the bottom of the skip bin, and a longer edge at the top. Where there is an upper trapezoid, it has the smaller edge at the top. At either end of the skip bin there is a sloping floor or wall. There are usually two lugs at the ends of the bin onto which chains can be attached, permitting the heavy skip bin to be lifted onto and off a lorry.[3] A special skip-carrying lorry or crane is used.
One end of the skip sometimes has a large door that hinges down to allow manual loading and unloading. Skips are usually durable and tough, made to withstand rough use by tradesmen and labourers. The size of skip bins can vary greatly depending on their use, with sizes ranging from small 2 yard mini skips to the very large 40 yard roll-on roll-off skips.[4] Even though these large bins can store many tonnes of waste, most lorries are limited to carrying around 8 tonnes (8,000 kg) of material in the container.
A typical small skip, when empty, weighs about 250 kilograms (550 lb).
Types
There are several types of skip contains, majority of them can be classified in three groups.[5]
Open skip
Open skips allow easier loading of waste materials and are commonly found on construction sites.
Closed skip
Closed skips are more secure and prevent unauthorized use of the skip. Moreover, they ensure that the volume of waste does not exceed the maximum limit.
RORO skip
Roll-on and roll-off skips are similar to open skips, but instead of being lifted onto a skip loader wagon by chains, they are rolled on to a wagon with a hook. They are more common as industrial containers and are not suitable for domestic uses.
Uses
Skips are commonly used to hold open-topped loads of construction and demolition waste or other waste and litter types. The construction debris may originate from a building, renovation, or demolition site; building supplies can be delivered to a site in a skip that is later used to remove waste. Skips are also used for various cleaning-out jobs that need much material to be taken away, and at factories producing large quantities of scrap metal. The material in the skip may be taken to a landfill, recycled or recovered/disposed of in some other way.
Skip hire companies typically print 'Level fill' on the sides of skips to instruct users that the contents should not fill or have contents showing above the height of the sides of the skip. This is in part for safety so that contents do not fall out posing a risk to passers-by and also aimed at maximising revenue for the skip hire company. Many tradesmen and builders will make use of what are termed 'greedy boards', old doors and other scrap sheet based material to artificially heighten the sides of the skip and thus get more value for money.
Etymology
The origins of calling a rubbish cart a skip (most often found in Australia and the UK) come from the word 'skep', used to refer to a basket. 'Skep' itself comes from the Late Old English sceppe, from Old Norse skeppa 'basket'.
See also
Notes
- ↑ The term "skip" is unknown and incomprehensible in North America (outside of the mining industry) and is not even listed in this sense in Merriam-Webster's Dictionary.
References
- ↑ http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/us/definition/american_english/skip#skip-2
- ↑ http://www.dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/british/skip_5
- ↑ Shergold, Steve. "Skip Bin Overview". Bins Skips Waste and Recycling. Retrieved 7 March 2013.
- ↑ "Skip Sizes". Sybil Bentley. Retrieved 17 August 2016.
- ↑ Waste Management: Skips And Dumpsters