Paper Shredder Construction
Most paper shredders come with a waste basket of their own. Those that don't are built to fit over another waste basket. They range in size and price from small and inexpensive units meant for home use, to larger units used in business settings that cost several hundred dollars.These machines are classified according to the size and shape of the waste they produce.
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Strip-cut shredders use rotating knives to cut narrow strips as long as the original sheet of paper. These strips can be reassembled by a determined investigator, so this type of shredder is the least secure. It also creates the highest volume of waste.
Cross-cut shredders use two contra-rotating drums to cut rectangular or parallelogram-shaped shreds.
Particle-cut shredders create tiny square or circular pieces.Disintegrators and granulators repeatedly cut the paper at random until the particles are small enough to pass through a mesh.
Hammermills and pulverizers reduce the paper to dust using a combination of rotating and stationary blades.
There are numerous standards for the security levels of paper shredders, including:
DIN 32757
Level 1 = 12 mm strips
Level 2 = 6 mm strips
Level 3 = 2 mm strips (Confidential)
Level 4 = 2 x 15 mm particles (Commercially Sensitive)
Level 5 = 0.8 x 12 mm particles (Top Secret or Classified)
Level 6 = 0.8 x 4 mm particles (Top Secret or Classified) United States Department of Defense (DoD) Top Secret = 0.8 x 11.1 mm (1/32" × 7/16") United States NSA/CSS 02-01 = 1 × 4 mm Historically, the US General Services Administration (GSA) set paper shredder guidance in the Interim Federal Specification FF-S-001169 dated 7/1971 which was superceded by standard A-A-2599 for classified material which was cancelled in 2/2000. GSA has not published a new standard since.
There are also alternative shredders that use burning, chemical decomposition, or composting for disposing of the shreds.
After the Supreme Court decision in California v. Greenwood, paper shredders became popular among even ordinary Americans as a tool for privacy enforcement.



