A crusher is a heavy-duty machine designed to reduce large rocks, stones, or ore into smaller, manageable pieces. Crushers operate through mechanical pressure or impact. The most common types include jaw crushers, cone crushers, and impact crushers. Jaw crushers work by compressing material between a fixed and a movable jaw. Cone crushers crush by squeezing the material inside a conical chamber. Impact crushers break materials by high-speed impacts. Crushers are widely used in mining for ore processing, construction for aggregate production, infrastructure projects, recycling plants, and industrial applications. The choice of crusher depends on the material type, required output size, and capacity.

What is a mobile crusher, what is it used for, how does it work, and where is it used?
Mobile crushers are portable crushing and screening plants mounted on wheeled or tracked platforms. They offer quick setup times and flexibility, making them ideal for projects with short durations or variable locations. The system integrates feeding conveyors, crushing units, and screening equipment. Material is fed, crushed, and classified on-site. Mobile crushers are preferred in urban construction, demolition debris recycling, temporary roadworks, and waste management due to their mobility and low operating costs.

What is a stationary crusher, what is it used for, how does it work, and where is it used?
Stationary crushers are heavy-duty, high-capacity crushing and screening systems installed on fixed foundations for continuous operation. Materials pass through multiple crushing stages—primary coarse crushing, secondary fine crushing, and screening. These systems are designed for durability, efficiency, and energy savings. They are commonly used in large-scale quarries, mining operations, and major infrastructure projects.

What are the differences between stationary and mobile crushers?
Stationary crushers are designed for continuous, high-volume production at a fixed location, making them difficult to relocate. They provide higher capacity, robustness, and energy efficiency. Mobile crushers, however, are flexible, easily transportable, and rapidly deployable but usually have lower capacity. Mobile units excel in project flexibility and fast setup, while stationary crushers offer superior durability and efficiency.

What is a basalt crushing and screening plant, what is it used for, how does it work, and where is it used?
A basalt crushing and screening plant processes dense, hard basalt rock into various sizes suitable for construction and road-building materials. Basalt is a volcanic rock known for high wear resistance. The plant uses jaw or impact crushers for primary coarse crushing, followed by cone or hammer crushers for finer sizing. Screening equipment sorts the crushed basalt into different grades. The aggregates produced are widely used in asphalt paving, concrete production, and railway infrastructure.