Jaw crushers utilize mechanical grinding to rapidly crush laboratory materials into desired sizes and fineness. Applications that require material processing using jaw crushers include pharmaceuticals, agriculture, life, and material science. In addition to size differences in the various jaw crusher’s available, key considerations are final fineness, material feed size, and hardness of feed material. Final fineness can range from less than .5 mm to 6 mm. Material feed size ranges can be less 40 mm to 350 mm. Laboratory jaw crushers can process hardness feed material ranges from medium-hard, hard, brittle, and tough.
A Jaw Crusher uses compressive force for breaking material. This mechanical pressure is achieved by the crusher’s two jaws dies,
]one of which is stationary and the other is movable. These two vertical manganese jaw dies create a V-shaped cavity called the
crushing chamber, where the top of the crushing chamber is larger than the bottom.
Jaw Crushers are sized by the top opening of the crushing chamber.
Applications for Jaw Crushers
Jaw Crushers are mostly used as the first stage of material size reduction in systems that may use several crushers to complete the circuit, the Jaw Crusher has also been used as a second-stage crushing unit. Depending on the application requirements, Jaw Crushers can be used in stationary, wheeled portable and track-mounted locations.
The Jaw Crusher is well suited for a variety of applications, including rock quarries, sand and gravel, mining, construction and demolition recycling, construction aggregates, road and railway construction, metallurgy, water conservancy and chemical industry.
Specification :
Maximum Feed Size | <45 mm or 100mm or 200mm |
End fineness | <1 to 15 mm or 10 to 40mm |
Material Input Opening | 100 x 60 mm , 150 x 100mm , 250 x 150mm |
Output | up to 250Kg/hr to 2000Kg/Hr |
Control Panel | Start/Stop |
Power requirements | (3-Phase)415 V , 1.5kw or 4.5Kw or 7 Kw |
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