Vibratory Sizers
Vibratory sizers machinery refers to specialized equipment used to separate bulk materials by particle size using controlled vibration. These machines are a step up from standard vibrating screens, offering multiple precise separations in a compact footprint—ideal for industries like mining, food processing, and recycling.
⚙️ What Makes Vibratory Sizers Unique
Multi-deck design: Often equipped with 2 to 7 decks for multiple size separations in one pass.
Linear or elliptical motion: Ensures efficient stratification and high throughput.
Compact and robust: Designed for continuous operation with minimal maintenance.
Energy-efficient: Some models use a single motor for multiple decks.
🌀 Common Types
Type Motion Best For
MS Sizers Linear High-capacity, energy-efficient sorting
ME/MEL Sizers Linear (dual) Fine particle separation, longer decks
BI-FLOW Sizers Dual-deck Fine sands, space-saving applications
🧪 Applications
Aggregates & minerals: Grading sand, gravel, ores
Food industry: Sorting nuts, grains, spices
Recycling: Separating plastics, metals, glass
Chemicals & fertilizers: Particle size control
For example, Rollier’s vibratory sizers offer up to 7 separations and are known for their low power consumption and easy screen replacement. Similarly, NutTech’s shaking decks are tailored for food-grade applications like sorting almonds or peanuts.
Fernwood is a village and civil parish in the Newark and Sherwood district of Nottinghamshire, England. The parish, which then included Balderton, had a population of 10,298 in 2001.[1] It is a suburb of Newark-on-Trent. The population of the civil parish was given as 2,190 in the 2011 census,[2] Balderton by that time was a separate civil parish. Fernwood itself increased to 3,054 at the 2021 census.[3]
1930s Art deco former hospital chimney nicknamed 'the water tower'
Modern Fernwood expansion has taken place on the site of the old Balderton Hospital which closed in 1993, with street names based on names of former hospital wards and employees.[4][5][6]
Following years of planning, preparatory work was started in 2023 to create an extension and bypass-link from the A1 road near Fernwood, via Middlebeck to the A46 at Farndon.[7][8]