For plastic processing, the choice between a shredder and a crusher mainly depends on the material form and output requirements. In simple terms: use a shredder for large, tough, or hard-to-handle plastics, and a crusher for small, uniform plastics.
A shredder specializes in coarse processing and is suitable for handling large, tough, or difficult-to-process plastics.
Applicable Scenarios:
Large Hard Materials: Such as large plastic barrels, plastic pallets, sprues, and large pipes.
Tangling Materials: Such as bundled plastic films, FIBCs (bulk bags), and woven bags.
Mixed Materials: Such as plastic waste containing metal or impurities (shredder blades are more wear-resistant and less prone to damage).
Working Principle: Uses low-speed, high-torque shearing force, like scissors, to "tear" or "cut" the material.
Output Result: Larger output size (usually above 20mm), in the form of irregular chunks or strips, mainly used for volume reduction (to reduce size for transportation) or as pre-processing for a crusher.
A crusher specializes in fine processing and is suitable for handling medium-sized, brittle plastics, with the goal of pelletizing.
Applicable Scenarios:
Injection Sprue Waste: Edge trimmings or defective parts from injection molding machines.
Bottle Flakes/Thin Sheets: Such as plastic bottles, plastic shells, and thin-walled pipes.
Recycling and Pelletizing: Requires crushing plastics into fine particles for cleaning, melting, and extrusion.
Working Principle: Uses high-speed rotating blades to "break" the material through impact, collision, and shearing.
Output Result: Smaller output size (usually below 10mm), in the form of uniform granules, which can be directly used for injection molding or pelletizing.
One-Sentence Summary: If your plastics are large and bulky (e.g., large barrels, pipes) or soft and flexible (e.g., films, bags), use a shredder first; if your plastics are small fragments (e.g., sprues, bottle flakes), use a crusher directly.