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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.​

​Swindon (/ˈswɪndən/ (listen)) is the largest town in Wiltshire, South West England, lying between Bristol, 35 miles (56 kilometres) to the west, and Reading, the same distance to the east. The town is 71 miles (114 km) west of London. The population of the Swindon built-up area was 185,600 in 2011.[1]

The Town Development Act 1952 led to a major increase in its population.[2]

Swindon railway station is on the line from London Paddington to Bristol. Swindon Borough Council is a unitary authority, independent of Wiltshire Council since 1997. Residents of Swindon are known as Swindonians. The town is home to the offices of English Heritage, the Historic England Archive (formerly the National Monuments Record Centre) and the headquarters of the National Trust (all three are on parts of the site of the former Great Western Railway's Swindon Works), and the head office of the Nationwide Building Society.

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