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.
Rhoose (/ruːs/ ROOSS;[2] Welsh: Y Rhws [ə ˈr̥uːs], from y rhos 'the moor'[3]) is a village and community near the sea (the Bristol Channel) in the Vale of Glamorgan, Wales, near Barry. The wider community includes villages and settlements such as Font-y-Gary, Penmark, East Aberthaw and Porthkerry. The population of the community in 2011 was 6,160.[1]
Description
The village is the location of Cardiff Airport,[4] formerly RAF Rhoose.[5] Commercial flights began in the 1950s and control passed to Glamorgan County Council in 1965, after which date the airport expanded.[5]
The village also has a Holiday Park (Fontygary Leisure Park),[6] some shops, a library,[7] two public houses (The Fontygary Inn and the Highwayman), Rhoose Social Club, and an active Surf Lifesaving Club (Rhoose Lifeguards) established in 1968.[8]
Rhoose is one of the fastest growing villages in the Vale of Glamorgan, with the three newest developments being "The Hollies", and more recently, Rhoose Point, and the newest development being the affluent Golwg y Mor (Welsh for "Sea View") development in the eastern part of the village. Further development of Rhoose Point was halted in 2008, because of concerns the drainage infrastructure would not cope.[9]
Rhoose Cardiff International Airport railway station, which was scheduled to re-open in 2003, suffered numerous bureaucratic delays before eventually re-opening in June 2005. There are now hourly train services to Cardiff and Bridgend via Barry and the Vale of Glamorgan.[10]