ISO 10218-1:2025 - Robotics - Safety Requirements
Release time:
2026-01-04 15:59
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Product Knowledge
Crusher Acceptance: A Critical Step to Ensure Equipment Quality
Understand the importance of crusher acceptance testing and its impact on equipment quality, ensuring your production line runs smoothly.
The Six Core Components of a Jaw Crusher
The jaw crusher is one of the most widely used mineral processing equipment, employed for crushing ore materials in stone production lines and mineral processing lines. It is the optimal equipment for both coarse and fine crushing of materials. Regular daily maintenance and upkeep of the jaw crusher can ensure its stable and efficient operation. To properly maintain the equipment, it’s essential first to understand its structure. In this article, Xinhai Machinery introduces the six key components of a jaw crusher:
Key Decision Points for Crusher Equipment Selection
Project Requirements: Recommended Equipment Types (with Justification):
1. Primary Crushing (for large-sized raw materials): Jaw Crusher (large feed opening, strong crushing force, high processing capacity);
2. Medium-to-Fine Crushing (for high-hardness materials): Cone Crusher (utilizes the laminated crushing principle, producing well-shaped particles with long service life for wear-resistant parts).
Differences and Similarities Between Palletizing Robots and Palletizers, as Well as Future Trends
Palletizing robots, equipped with robotic arms that enable efficient and flexible operations, significantly outperform traditional palletizers and are gradually becoming the key choice for boosting efficiency and reducing costs in the industrial packaging and logistics warehousing sectors.
The Core Differences Between Commercial Concrete Mixing Plants and Dry-Mix Mortar Mixing Plants
Dry-mix mortar mixing plants and commercial concrete plants look very similar at first glance—they both consist of several tanks and a mixing building. In fact, these two types of equipment are remarkably alike. What we often refer to as wet-mix mortar and dry-mix mortar is typically distinguished by the mortar’s physical form—whether water is added or not. So besides the physical form of the materials, what other differences exist?
Dry-mixed mortar, a type of mortar supplied in a commercialized form, refers to a product whose ingredients are centrally mixed at a factory rather than on-site. Together with pre-mixed (wet) mortar, it constitutes the two major categories of commercial mortars.