Crushers are machines designed to reduce large and hard materials like rocks, stones, and ore into smaller fragments. Using jaw, impact, or cone crushing stages, they produce aggregates, concrete and asphalt materials, and construction base products. Material is fed through a feeder, crushed, and sized using vibration screens. Product outputs are moved via conveyors for packing or storage. Crushers are essential in concrete plants, road and bridge construction, mining sites, quarries, and recycling facilities.
What Is a Mobile Crusher, What Is It Used For, How Does It Work, and Where Is It Applied?
A mobile crusher is a transportable crushing-screening system mounted on wheels or tracks. Powered by diesel or electricity, it processes materials on-site, reducing transportation costs and enabling site-to-site flexibility. Material is fed, crushed in stages, screened, and conveyed to stockpiles. Mobile crushers are ideal for construction sites, road projects, demolition recycling, temporary mining operations, and emergency response scenarios.
What Is a Stationary Crusher, What Is It Used For, How Does It Work, and Where Is It Applied?
A stationary crusher is a high-capacity, permanently installed crushing plant on concrete or steel foundations. Raw material is fed via bunkers or silos through jaw and cone crushers, sized using vibrating screens, and transported via conveyors. Automations ensure continuous and efficient output. Stationary crushers are used in large quarries, mining operations, concrete and asphalt plants, port fill operations, and major infrastructure works.
How Do Stationary and Mobile Crushers Differ?
Mobile crushers are transportable, require minimal setup, and are suitable for short-term usage, but have limited capacity. Stationary crushers are fixed installations designed for long-term, high-volume production with lower per-unit production costs, requiring significant initial infrastructure investment.
What Is a Calcite Crushing and Screening Plant, What Is It Used For, How Does It Work, and Where Is It Applied?
A calcite crushing and screening plant processes natural calcite mineral into size-graded products for industrial use. Calcite is a valuable raw material used in construction, ceramics, glass, plastic fillers, and chemicals. The process begins with jaw crushing, continues with cone or impact crushing, and includes vibrating screen classification. Optional grinding units produce micronized calcite powder. Final products are conveyed for storage or packaging. Applications include paints and coatings, glass and ceramics, plastic fillers, calcium carbonate chemicals, and various industrial applications.