Under what conditions do compost creatures work the fastest, making the SUPERCOMP a rapid composter?

  1. A compost pile must be ventilated as well as possible. If this is not the case, the process nearly comes to a halt, taking much longer (up to 24 months), and can develop bad odors. The SUPERCOMP can be ventilated fully, vertically from the bottom to the top, by using its gliding and landing gear (chimney effect).
  2. Compost piles should not be moved, because the compost creatures (especially the composite worms) lee immediately when disturbed, making it hard for the compost process to be set in motion again. With a SUPERCOMP eliminates the otherwise necessary turning (= moving) of the pile, and the compost process is undisturbed.
  3. The environment for living things should not be too wet, not too dry.
    A composter protects the pile from sun and rain. Under extreme weather conditions, such as under constant heat or rain, the ideal conditions can be manually recreated easily by adding “woody” materials (if there is too much moisture) or by pouring in water (in too dry conditions). But do not worry: This is extremely rare. As long as you always provide the SUPERCOMP with fresh and moist materials, no problems are to be expected.

In summary: A SUPERCOMP composter, with its patented sliding and supporting device, creates the ideal living conditions for compost creatures (1 billion living organisms per cm3). They can work incredibly fast, multiply perfectly and quickly create high-quality compost.

 

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Fresh compost soil after 6-8 weeks – how is that possible?

This is made possible by the sufficient air supply to the air-loving (” aerobic “) compost organisms which are responsible for the composting process. Compared to a SUPERCOMP, conventional compost piles are often poorly ventilated at their core (the middle of the pile), which leads to the air-loving compost organisms “slaving away” with bad air quality. The result is a slow composting process (up to 24 months), which is often accompanied by unpleasant odours due to putrefaction.

With the SUPERCOMP‘s patented sliding and supporting device, the pile is no longer laying on the floor with its full weight, meaning its inner core is fully ventilated, vertically from the bottom up (chimney effect). A densification, as with composters without technology or plain compost piles, in which the compost is laying on the ground with its full weight, does not take place here.

 

Continuous aeration is mainly responsible for the composting process because if the compost heap is well ventilated, the compost creatures can  work much faster. With he SUPERCOMP, unpleasant smells stay out and you can get significantly more waste  (triple performance) in the same time.

SUPERCOMP composters also don’t need to be moved.

Why? Because the pile is not on the ground with its full weight, making it easy and convenient to remove ready material from the harvest chamber with a shovel. In conventional composting as well as in composting without special technology, you should move the pile for airing it out (=turning the pile over at least once every 14 days, and the more often, the better the crop). Furthermore, it is almost impossible to take ready compost from the bottom of a pile that weighs 100kg. For this to even be possible, you have to dismount the whole pile, rebuild it and pile everything in layers once again. Finally, because this job is tiresome and because of the heavy odours, this is often just not done.

 

Note: Studies on compost plants with conventional windrow composting showed that even 24 hours (!) after moving the pile, there already are air deficiencies, as the material falls together, becoming dense once more.

 

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