Fixed Crushing Plants

 

On the left is a new screening plant and conveyors, designed, fabricated and erected by Sureshot.

The double deck screens were Parker Rapide units rebuilt by Sureshot 

The plants are designed so that the underflow from the right hand screen reports to the left hand screen.

This method of mounting the screens provides a compact and cost effective plant.

The black material is rubber that was used to line the underscreen chutes and delivery chutes.

To control dust, the plants was later covered by a portal building.

The following are some of the plants that we have designed and built.

The right hand picture shows a twin screening plant.

It was designed by Andrew Catto and built by our sister company “Milestone” in South Africa.

The screens were Telsmith and this was part of a much larger crushing and screening project.

The screens are designed is this set up to minimise the number of conveyors, there are many options to this design.

 

 

The picture on the right shows a 1200 mm by 35 metre heavy duty conveyor that feeds a double screening plant.

This conveyor, along with the rest of the plant was designed, fabricated and installed by Sureshot.

It has a designed capacity of 1266 TPH but was installed to transport 500 tonnes TPH.

The concrete work was also done by Sureshot.

 

 

This picture taken in Oman shows a Sureshot designed and fabricated structure for a large primary crushing plant.

The crusher is a Cedarapids 30-54 single toggle jaw, the picture shows the plant within a few weeks of completion.

The crusher is part of a major crushing and screening complex located about 30 kilometres south of the town of Sur in Oman.

 

 

The picture on the right shows a crushing and screening plant was designed by Jack Mills and Andrew Catto.

The plant was designed to crush and sort material for cement production.

The limestone was heavily contaminated, requiring hand picking.

The plant is located in Malawi and used Svedala equipment.

Once the plant was set up and working well, the quarry manager managed to drop the high face that was behind it, directly onto the plant, thus destroying it.

 

 

Normally, Sureshot does not do this kind of work, however, this used hopper, feeder and primary crushing station was disassembled, moved to another site, modified,  and reassembled.

Working with old equipment is often a false economy, it is likely that a new plant could have been fabricated for less than the cost of this old one.

The items painted grey are new units designed, built and supplied by Sureshot the steel painted yellow is the old stuff.

It was fitted with a Sureshot rebuilt Nordberg impact crusher.