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Independent Field Studies

Composting News Feature Article   Wisconsin Research Study  Massachusetts Bin Capacity Chart




Wisconsin Research Study: Commercial Compost Bin Trials

by Paul Hartman, Brown County UW-Extension Horticulture Agent, Green Bay, Wisconsin

SITUATION STATEMENT: Composting on site could be an advantage for municipalities that collect yard waste. If a large percent of homeowners in a municipality composted their own yard waste, less time and money would be needed for pickup and composting. Some municipalities have concluded that it is cheaper to cost share a compost bin with homeowners than it is to pick up yard waste. At present, many municipalities in Brown County collect yard waste. It would be important for them to know which bins would be the best choices should they decide to promote a bin program. OBJECTIVES: To test 10 (or more) commercially manufactured compost bins and compare: (1) rate of composting; (2) ease of handling; (3) cost; (4) size.This is the third part of a three-year study. Please refer to last year's study for a summary of what occurred in 1995.

PROCEDURE & RESULTS: On June 12, 1996, Master Gardeners and I spent several hours mixing 2/3 "brown" material (mostly six-month-old leaves) with 1/3 "green" material (mostly grass clippings from June 1996) in a concrete bunker that had at one time been used for salt storage. This activity took place behind the Agriculture & Extension Service Center, 1150 Bellevue St., Green Bay, Wisconsin.

After that, on the same day, 11 commercial compost bins and one homemade bin were set up and filled with the mixed material. The amount of material put into each bin "filled" each bin. Actually, the material was measured by pail into each bin until the smaller ones were filled. The larger ones were added to until we used all the mixed material. Temperatures were taken in the center (hottest) of each bin. Temperatures were recorded for all bins for 15 days.

Compost bins were maintained weekly by Master Gardener Harvey Plansky and others. Bins that needed tumbling were tumbled and water was added where needed.

EVALUATION: Temperature data was used to determine high thermophilic bacterial activity. According to composting experts in Wisconsin, "A pile needs to be in the 130 to 160 degrees F. range for optimum decomposition1." The data shows a wide variation from bin to bin. The bins that sustained higher temperatures longer were judged to be superior in the rate and extent of decomposition of the compost material during the time frame studied. However, Richard Albert, bacteriologist, says, "Higher temperatures do not always indicate faster composting." Composting by bacteria, fungi, etc. does continue at lower temperatures. All the bins had a good amount of composted material. Compost maturity may not occur until much later than the study's time frame. We did not test for compost maturity.

Bins 3, 5, 7 and 11 had a mean temperature of 113.0 F. Bins 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 9, 10 and 12 had a mean temperature of 95.9 F. This is a statistically significant difference with a 95% confidence level (see Tables One and Two). If you equate the mean temperatures with advanced decomposition, then bins 3, 5, 7 and 11 initially decomposed more quickly than the rest. This also correlates with nutrients available (see Plot #1) factor analysis comparing nutrient availability with temperature.

FASTEST DECOMPOSITION:
Bin #3 = 40 cu. ft. (not covered)
Bin #5 = 18 cu. ft. (not covered)
Bin #7 = 22 cu. ft. (not covered)
Bin #11 = 14.5 cu. ft. (not covered)
SLOWEST DECOMPOSITION:
Bin #1 = 18 cu. ft. (covered) 
Bin #2 = 12 cu. ft. (covered) 
Bin #4 = 6 cu. ft. (covered) 
Bin #6 = 10.5 cu. ft. (covered) 
Bin #8 = 14.8 cu. ft. (covered) 
Bin #9 = 12.5 cu. ft. (covered) 
Bin #10 = 9 cu. ft. (covered) 
Bin #12 = 23 cu. ft. (covered) 
Bins 3, 5, 7 and 11 were uncovered bins, therefore receiving more natural water and thus keeping the compost going longer (we watered the covered bins but only as they dried out). The largest bins not covered did the best (as decomposition relates to sustaining temperatures). If we had uncovered all the bins we would have had a fair comparison. We didn't do that because we wanted to test the bins as set up by the manufacturers.

It is our hypothesis that most people will not work too hard at composting. Therefore, the open bin (natural watering) with the biggest volume (that doesn't dry out) will do the best. That includes bins 3, 5, 7 and 11. We liked bin #3 the best because of the expandable volume going up to 40 cu. ft. Can we say statistically that some bins worked better than others? Yes, we can, but only for the reasons mentioned above. For the average composter and most municipalities I would recommend an open-topped, large-volume bin. Bin costs (of the open tops) were also significantly lower. Bins that were the most trouble to use were bin #4 (small volume, dried out quickly) and bin #12 (too heavy to roll).

All the bins were easy to assemble. The open-top bins were less work (extra watering not needed). Then you have less control. (If in a humid climate you may have too much rain on them!) Activators and turning were not used in 1996 because they did not change decomposition significantly the first year.

IMPLICATIONS: Homeowners can easily compost yard waste in their own yard. The bins tested looked good, did not occupy much space and were not subject to rodent infestation. Cost and ease of handling would be major factors in choosing a bin. We did not test all bins available on the market, but it is likely that many other bins would perform as well as the ones tested. Homemade bins should also compare favorably with commercial bins, if they were large enough.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: Thanks to all the distributors and manufacturers of the bins we tested. Backyard composting is a viable option to help homeowners recycle on site. Thanks to Master Gardeners Harvey Plansky, Lloyd Giese, and others for much of the physical work. Thanks to Richard Albert, bacteriologist, and John Peters, soil scientist, for reviewing this document.

1.Maureen Mecozzi, Waste Reduction and Recovery Program, DNR Bureau of Solid and Hazardous Waste Management, 1969.

Bin #

Name of Composter
Name of Manufacturer

Available at

Approx.
Cost1

Size

Ease2
Easiest=1
Hardest=10

Rating3
Superior=1
OK=2
Needs Imprvmnt=3

1

#3735 Rubbermaid Composter
Rubbermaid, Inc., 1147 Akron Rd.,
Wooster, OH 44691

ACE & True Value Hardware

$89.00

18 cu. ft.

1

2

2

Four Panel Deluxe Composter
North States Industries, Inc.
1200 Mendelssohn Ave., Minneapolis, MN 55427; (612) 541-9109

ACE Hardware

$49.00

12 cu. ft.

1

3

3

Covered Bridge Composting Bin
Covered Bridge Organic Farms Coop
P.O. Box 164, Jefferson, OH 44047
(216) 576-5515

Direct from factory

$40.00 delivered

23 & 40 cu. ft. (adjust- able)

1

1

4

Green Magic Tumbler
Gardener's Supply Company
128 Intervale Rd., Burlington, VT 04501
(800) 876-5520; (802) 863-1700

Order from Gardener's Supply Co. Catalog

$119.95

6 cu. ft.

5

3

5

Presto Home & Garden Compost Bin
Presto Products Co.
1831 W. Winnebago, Appleton WI 54913
(920) 738-1440

Direct from Presto Outlet in Appleton

$7.50

18 cu. ft.

1

1

6

The Earth Machine
Norseman Plastics, 39 Westmore Dr., Rexdale, Ontario M9V 3Y6 Canada
(800) 267-4391

Direct from factory

$49.00

10.5 cu. ft.

1

2

7

#5201 Handy Composter
Wilmarc, Inc.
5266 E. 65th St., Indianapolis, IN 46220
(317) 849-9596

Direct from factory

$19.95 delivered

22 cu. ft. (adjust-able)

2

1

8

CP100 No-Turn Composter
Gardener Equipment Co., PO Box 106, Juneau, WI 53039; (414) 386-4880

Mills Fleet Farm

$80.00

14.8 cu. ft.

3

2

9

Soilsaver
Barclay Recycling, Inc., 75 Ingram Dr., Toronto, Ontario M6M 2M2 Canada
(800) 668-8430

True Value Hardware

$60.00

12.5 cu. ft.

5

2

10

Green Keeper Compost
Solarcone, Inc., P.O. Box 67
16438 Second St., Seward IL 61077-0067
(815) 247-8454

Direct from factory

$100.00

9 cu. ft.

4

2

11

Wooden Bin Composter

Homemade

$35.00

14.5 cu. ft.

1

1

12

Bio-Orb Composter
Shape Plastics Corp., PO Box 538, Sharon, WI 53585
(414) 736-8888

Menards

$99.00

23 cu. ft.

10

3

1. Costs were retail costs in 1994. Changes for 1995 were not noted.

2. Ease includes set-up.

3. Overall rating includes rate of decomposition, length of high temperatures, favorable C/N ratio changes, & total N available.

Date Bin Number & Temperature Inside Bins Time Air Temp Comments
  1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12      
6/12 84 82 84 93 84 81 80 84 92 83 83 84   82 Orig. temps. within 1/2 hour of filling. Bin 3 filled 1/2. Watered 3 qts. Filled 1/3 green, 2/3 brown. Started June 4 (1/4).
6/13 138 126 141 106 136 129 137 139 133 136 135 130 7:20 AM 70  
6/14 145 141 153 107 156 152 154 156 151 153 153 143 7:30 AM 70  
6/15 142 136 152 99 151 144 151 151 145 146 150 125 6:50 AM 56  
6/16 132 118 151 89 148 142 152 141 134 140 144 108 7:05 AM 64  
6/17 103 89 128 69 130 98 138 115 100 110 128 85 10:00 AM 62  
6/18 88 80 125 68 104 84 120 94 90 94 104 67 9:00 AM 60 Rain for 2 days. High yest. 65. Rain 1.5" (3/4" overnight)
6/19 72 74 115 64 100 80 100 86 83 84 92 66 8:00 AM 59 High yest. 65 with rain. Today misty, no sun.
6/20 72 74 108 76 95 74 91 80 82 80 90 76 9:00 AM 75 High yest. 72, low of 65.
6/21 80 78 115 84 97 85 100 86 87 88 97 90 7:30 AM 72  
6/22 82 77 112 92 101 84 97 88 86 88 104 88 8:30 AM 69  
6/23 78 77 104 70 100 84 99 91 89 88 106 88 7:26 AM 60  
6/24 76 71 96 68 98 80 92 86 81 78 98 78 7:04 AM 61  
6/25 73 71 89 72 90 78 90 85 78 76 86 73 7:40 AM 65  
6/26 77 73 85 79 85 80 89 91 81 78 89 78 10:20 AM 75  
Ave Temp 97.0 91.8 119.6 81.6 113.6 99.6 115.0 112.0 101.4 102.7 112.6 92.5      
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