Recycling materials refer to construction and demolition waste — concrete debris, asphalt fragments, bricks, and mixed industrial mineral waste — reprocessed into reusable aggregates through crushing and screening systems. Recycled aggregates are widely used in road base materials, infrastructure backfilling, and secondary construction applications.
Unlike natural stone processing, recycling operations involve highly heterogeneous feed materials, where steel reinforcement, impurities, variable hardness, and irregular particle shapes create unstable and unpredictable processing conditions.
Why recycling is harder on equipment
Crushing under unpredictable loads
Recycling crushers handle irregular feed sizes, embedded steel reinforcement, and unpredictable material hardness. Sudden impact loads and foreign objects create uneven wear patterns and a higher risk of component fatigue than conventional aggregate production.
Screening contaminated, irregular material
Screening systems must separate usable aggregates from fines, contaminants and oversized fractions. Irregular particle shapes, mixed composition and high contamination levels reduce screening efficiency and accelerate wear of screening media.
Conveying variable material
Conveying systems transport materials with highly variable density and shape. Unexpected heavy objects and uneven material flow create additional mechanical stress and wear variability across rollers, belts and related components.
What this means for wear parts
Mixed material hardness, embedded metal contaminants, irregular particle geometry and sudden impact loading significantly increase wear variability across all systems. Robust component selection and a stable replacement supply chain are what keep recycling plants running profitably.