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How to Design a Granite Crushing and Sand-Making Production Line?

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This article provides a comprehensive guide to granite production lines: a complete design from crushing and screening to grinding.

Granite, renowned for its hard texture and attractive color, is widely used in construction and serves as an excellent raw material for manufactured sand and gravel. However, as a hard rock, it poses significant processing challenges, demanding exceptional wear resistance and crushing power from equipment. A complete granite production line includes feeding, crushing, sand making, sand washing, and grinding stages, interconnected by conveying systems.

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Granite crushing equipment is a mechanical system designed to overcome granite’s high hardness and abrasiveness through progressive crushing from coarse to fine. It includes jaw crushers for primary crushing, cone crushers or impact crushers for secondary and tertiary crushing, and impact sand makers for producing sand.

The crushing process is the indispensable foundation for efficient grinding and high-quality sand production. The crushing system does more than simply reduce the size of rocks; its crucial role is to prevent wear and sudden shutdowns in subsequent equipment caused by large stones.
Thus, the initial crushing system can significantly reduce expenses related to maintenance and downtime in downstream equipment, effectively boosting production efficiency, lowering production costs, and ultimately increasing economic returns.

Jaw crushers are essential for primary crushing. For secondary crushing of granite, should you choose a cone crusher or an impact crusher? Let’s compare the two:

Cone CrusherImpact Crusher
Crushing PrincipleLaminar compressionImpact Collision
Suitable MaterialsHigh-hardness materials (e.g., granite, basalt)Medium-to-low hardness materials (e.g., limestone, dolomite)
Wear ResistanceExcellent. Core wear-resistant parts use high-manganese steel alloys for extended service life.Poor. When used for granite, hammer plates and impact plates wear extremely rapidly, requiring frequent replacement.
Final Product ShapeGood. Uniform particle size, though needle and flake content is slightly higher than impact crushers.Excellent. Produces cubical, well-shaped particles, but at the cost of extremely high wear.
Energy ConsumptionLowerHigher

Given granite’s high hardness and abrasive properties, selecting a cone crusher is far more economical and reliable than an impact crusher, both in terms of cost and particle shape.

Granite Crushing Production Line
Granite Crushing Production Line

Granite grinding equipment processes smaller particles (typically <20mm) produced by crushing systems into finer powders through grinding, friction, or impact.
Depending on required fineness and capacity, Raymond mills, vertical mills, ball mills, or ultra-fine mills may be employed. The following diagram illustrates their relationships:

The core of a granite grinding production line lies in ultra-fine pulverization, precise classification, and efficient collection. Therefore, comprehensive consideration must be given to raw material characteristics, product objectives, investment scale, and environmental requirements.

3D-Process-Diagram-for-Granite-Primary-and-Secondary-Crushing
Crushing Stage
Granite-Grinding-3D-Process-Diagram
Grinding Stage
Granite-Drying-3D-Process-Diagram
Drying Stage

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