Nord Gearmotors Helps Vincent Corporation put the Squeeze on Almost Everything
The applications are too numerous to list in their entirety. Coffee grounds. Eggshell waste. Pomegranates and pineapples. Manure and paper mill sludge. Tobacco. These are just a few of the materials that require dewatering, a process that—as its name suggests—separates fluids from solids, often converting what would otherwise go down the drain or end up in a landfill into saleable products.
Bob Johnston will tell you dewatering is nothing new, even though he’s quick to add that new requests come along every day.
“I just returned from a business trip where I took fourteen airplane flights in two weeks. This year I have visited a company in Malaysia that’s begun dewatering waste fiberglass, another in the Caribbean pulling the liquids out of sargassum seaweed, seven factories in Vietnam processing coffee grounds, one in India making pharmaceuticals…it’s a long list.” He laughs. “If you’d asked me a couple of years ago, it would have been marijuana. That was a pretty hot market back then.”

This last application required upwards of two hundred dewatering units, Johnston adds, each equipped with a gearbox from Waunakee, Wisconsin-based Nord Drivesystems, whose team he’s worked with quite closely over the past 17 years. That’s because Johnston is the engineering manager for Vincent Corporation of Tampa, FL., a company whose name has become synonymous with the dewatering screw press that founder Dan Vincent patented in 1961.
His efforts in this area began three decades before that, however, when Vincent began making an entirely different product. “He was going around to the juice canneries in those days, collecting the piles of orange peel, putting them in a dryer, and using the dried peel to make cattle feed,” says Johnston.
Vincent had a problem, though: before drying the peel, it began to attract flies. That’s when he noticed the canneries were sprinkling hydrated lime (calcium hydroxide) on the piles of orange peels and that water would soon begin running from the bottom as a result. He quickly moved to patent the chemical reaction, then took his idea one step further by squeezing the peels in what would soon be known throughout the industry as a dewatering screw press.