Different types of crushers have their own focuses on design and working principles, but they also share many common operating characteristics.
Widely used but with distinct characteristics: crushers are widely used in various industries and play a key role as important processing equipment. However, it is worth noting that crushing operations are often accompanied by high energy consumption and significant noise, and the consumption of wear-resistant components in equipment is also relatively high.
Automated operation process: Modern crushers typically integrate functions such as automatic feeding, continuous operation, and finished product collection, achieving automation and continuity in production and greatly improving production efficiency.
Key components are wear-resistant and durable: In order to ensure the service life and crushing effect of the equipment, the core components of the crusher, such as the blade head, hammer head, lining plate, etc., are usually made of high hardness and high wear resistant alloy materials (such as high manganese steel).
Environment and safety design: Many models adopt fully enclosed or negative pressure systems to suppress dust diffusion and reduce the impact on the environment. For crushers that handle medical waste or flammable and explosive materials, they also have specialized sealing, explosion-proof, and alarm systems.
Fineness adjustable: The discharge particle size of the equipment (i.e. the degree of particle fineness after crushing) can usually be adjusted. Common adjustment methods include replacing different mesh screens, adjusting the gap between the hammer head and the lining plate, or changing the speed of the grading equipment.

