A mobile crusher is a portable crushing machine designed to reduce large rocks, stones, concrete, or asphalt into smaller, usable materials. Mounted on a wheeled or tracked chassis, it can be easily transported from site to site. It offers high flexibility and is ideal for short-term or multi-location construction and mining projects.


How Does It Work?

Mobile crushers consist of several integrated components:

  1. Feeder (Vibrating hopper): Evenly feeds material into the crusher.

  2. Crusher Unit:

    • Jaw Crusher: For primary crushing of hard materials.

    • Cone Crusher: For secondary, fine crushing.

    • Impact Crusher: For softer or medium-hard rocks.

  3. Screening Unit: Sorts crushed material into different sizes.

  4. Conveyor Belts: Transfers material between units and to the final stockpile.

  5. Chassis & Mobility System: Enables transportation and on-site setup.


What is It Used For?

  • Aggregate production for roads and concrete

  • On-site stone crushing to minimize transport costs

  • Recycling of construction and demolition waste


Application Areas:

  • Road and bridge construction

  • Dam building and energy projects

  • Urban demolition and material recycling

  • Quarries and mining operations

  • Infrastructure in remote areas


What is a Mobile Crushing Plant?

A mobile crushing plant is a complete set of equipment that performs crushing, screening, and transportation of material all in one compact unit. It processes natural rock or recycled materials directly on-site, making it highly efficient and cost-effective.


How It Works:

  1. Raw material is fed into the vibrating feeder.

  2. The material enters the crusher and is reduced in size.

  3. Screeners classify the crushed material.

  4. Conveyors move the final products to storage or delivery.

  5. Some systems also include water sprayers for dust suppression.


Uses and Applications:

  • Real-time aggregate production at construction sites

  • Concrete and asphalt recycling

  • Crushing in mountainous or hard-to-reach areas

  • Preprocessing in mining operations

  • Emergency deployment in disaster zones