Have you ever watched a production line grind to a halt—not because something broke, but because material stuck? Stuck at the inlet. Stuck on the hammers. Stuck in the screen. Workers poke with iron bars, sweating. The production manager stares at the stopped clock, heart racing. And those half-wet chicken manures, fermented straws, dripping mushroom residues just sit there, laughing at your equipment.
Ordinary crushers see wet material and run. They can't handle it. But there's one machine that actually bites wet and sticky stuff—the half-wet material crusher.
It's Not a Crusher. It's a Sticky-Stuff Specialist.
Others fear stickiness. This machine doesn't. Why?
Because it never gives material a chance to stick. Inside the crushing chamber, two rows of high-strength hammers spin at high speed. They don't grind slowly—they smash hard. Material gets torn apart the moment it enters. Before it can stick, the next hammer hits. The chamber has no dead corners, no flat surfaces for material to cling to. And even if something tries to stick, the high-speed airflow blows it away instantly.
Those hammers? Not ordinary iron. They're specially hardened alloy, with sharp edges designed for fibrous materials. Wet straw? Turns into strands. Wet manure? Becomes powder. Wet fruit residue? Turns into uniform fines. And those sticky clays and sludges that clog ordinary machines? Here, they get smashed into pieces and pass right through the screen.
The Screen? It's Clever.
What do half-wet materials fear most? Clogged screens. In ordinary crushers, rotary screener machine get wet, holes plug, output drops, and finally—stop.
This machine's screen is different. First, its position—wrapped around the lower half of the crushing chamber. Material doesn't trickle through by gravity; it's thrown out by centrifugal force from high-speed rotation. Second, cleaning—every time a hammer passes near the screen, it creates an air pulse that blows away any wet particles trying to stick. Third, materi