A mobile rock crusher plant is designed to crush rocks and minerals on-site, eliminating the need for transporting materials to a stationary crusher. Here’s how it works:
1. Components of a Mobile Rock Crusher Plant
A typical setup includes:
- Primary Crusher (Jaw or Impact Crusher) – Breaks large rocks into smaller pieces.
- Secondary Crusher (Cone or Impact Crusher) – Further reduces size for finer output.
- Vibrating Feeder – Regulates material flow into the crushers.
- Conveyor Belts – Transport crushed material between stages and to stockpiles.
- Screening Unit – Separates crushed material by size (e.g., scalping screen, trommel).
- Power Source – Diesel engine or electric motor.
- Mobility System – Tracks or wheels for easy relocation.
- Rocks are loaded into the hopper via an excavator or wheel loader.
- A vibrating feeder ensures steady material flow into the primary crusher.
- The primary crusher (usually a jaw crusher) breaks large rocks (~24”–48”) into smaller chunks (~6”–8”).
- Adjustable settings control output size.
- Smaller rocks move via conveyor to a secondary crusher (cone/impact).
- After crushing, material passes through screens to separate sizes:
- Final product is conveyed to stockpiles or directly loaded onto trucks.
- Portability: Move between job sites quickly (track/wheel-mounted).
- Cost-Efficiency: Reduces hauling costs since crushing happens on-site.
- Flexibility: Can process various materials (limestone, granite, recycled concrete).
- Quick Setup: Self-contained units require minimal installation.

2. How It Works
(A) Feeding Stage

(B) Primary Crushing
(C) Secondary Crushing & Screening
– Oversized material may be recirculated back for further crushing.
– Correctly sized aggregate is stockpiled.





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