A crusher is a machine used to break large-sized stones, rocks, or ores into smaller pieces. Its main purpose is to process raw material into usable sizes for construction, industrial production, or mining.

How does it work?
Crushers operate on the principle of applying mechanical force. Material is fed through a feeder and crushed by mechanisms such as jaw crushers, cone crushers, or impact crushers. Crushed material is sorted by vibrating screens; appropriate sizes proceed, while larger pieces are returned for further crushing.

Usage areas:

  • Road and infrastructure construction

  • Concrete and asphalt production

  • Mining and ore processing

  • Recycling facilities


What is a Mobile Crusher, What Does It Do, How Does It Work, and Where Is It Used?

A mobile crusher is a portable crushing and screening plant mounted on tracks or wheels, enabling easy relocation and operation on different sites.

What does it do?
It allows processing of materials directly at the source, reducing transportation costs and saving time.

How does it work?
Mobile crushers include diesel or electric-powered crushers, screens, feeders, and conveyors in a compact unit. Operators can quickly install and start production onsite.

Usage areas:

  • Construction and road sites

  • Recycling yards

  • Temporary mining operations

  • Disaster zones


What is a Stationary Crusher, What Does It Do, How Does It Work, and Where Is It Used?

Stationary crushers are permanent crushing and screening plants installed on concrete foundations, designed for high production capacity.

What does it do?
They provide continuous and efficient crushing and screening for large volume projects.

How does it work?
Stationary crushers consist of multiple crushing stages (primary, secondary, tertiary) and screening units. Material moves through the plant via conveyor belts.

Usage areas:

  • Large quarries and mining operations

  • Concrete and asphalt plants

  • Long-term infrastructure projects


Differences Between Stationary and Mobile Crushers

Stationary crushers are high-capacity, permanent plants with higher initial investment but greater production efficiency. Mobile crushers offer flexibility, easy relocation, and fast setup, suitable for small to medium-scale projects but have limited capacity compared to stationary plants.


What is a Magnesium Crushing and Screening Plant, What Does It Do, How Does It Work, and Where Is It Used?

A magnesium crushing and screening plant processes natural magnesium minerals (typically dolomite or magnesite) by crushing and screening to produce material suitable for industrial applications.

What does it do?
Magnesium minerals are used as refractory materials in steel production, chemical industries, and other sectors. The plant produces minerals at desired sizes and purity levels for these uses.

How does it work?

  1. Magnesium ore is fed to the crusher via a feeder.

  2. Large pieces are reduced by jaw or cone crushers.

  3. Vibrating screens classify material by size.

  4. Magnetic separators may remove iron contaminants.

  5. Properly sized material is packaged and stored.

Usage areas:

  • Steel and refractory industries

  • Chemical production

  • Construction materials manufacturing

  • Agriculture and fertilizer sectors