Many Ecuador workshops are expanding output, which increases chip generation and exposes a common bottleneck: chip handling does not scale well when it stays “manual and loose.” Loose chips are bulky, difficult to stage neatly, and often carry coolant that makes storage messy. As more recyclers and transport partners prefer consistent packaging, chip briquetting is becoming the practical upgrade path. A stable chips briquetting machine helps operations reduce clutter, improve safety around storage zones, and ship a more consistent material form—without relying on constant labor.
The customer’s challenges were typical for high-activity machining environments:
Frequent bin changes and forklift movements for low-density chips
Poor staging discipline because chips did not stack or load cleanly
Coolant contamination that made transport and storage untidy
Dispatch inefficiency due to loose, unpredictable volumes
They wanted a turnings briquetting press that creates a repeatable output format and reduces daily cleaning and re-handling.
Jiangsu Wanshida Hydraulic Machinery Co., Ltd. delivered 1 set Y83-2500 scrap chips briquetting press machine to anchor a simple operating routine:
Collect → Feed → Compress → Eject → Stack/Load.
The selection emphasized stable hydraulic pressure, fast cycle time, and a compact briquette geometry that supports stacking. By turning chips into uniform briquettes, the customer could organize storage and shipping more like a production flow than a cleanup job. This approach makes the metal chips briquetting press a daily tool for discipline and efficiency.
| Item | Specification (Y83-2500 Scrap Briquetting Press) |
|---|---|
| Front main cylinder | YG340/220-310, 2000 kN, stroke 310 mm, 1 pc |
| Back main cylinder | YG160/100-310, 500 kN, stroke 310 mm, 1 pc |
| Pushing cylinder | YG110/63-265, 55 kN, stroke 265 mm, 1 pc |
| Hydraulic system pressure | 25 MPa |
| Briquette size (D×H) | Ø100 × (50–60) mm |
| Cycle length | ~12 sec (excluding feed time) |
| Pump (1) | CBA1032F, 20 MPa, 32 ml/r, 1 set |
| Pump (2) | 80YCY14-1B, 31.5 MPa, 80 ml/r, 1 set |
| Motor | Y200L2-6, 22 kW, 970 rpm, 1 set |
| Capacity | ~800 kg/h |
| Weight | ~5000 kg |
The customer noted that the most visible change was cleanliness and order: briquettes replaced loose chip heaps, and staging became easier to manage. Next, internal transport improved because briquettes were easier to pick and stack. Finally, shipping became more predictable: uniform briquettes reduced loading friction and helped maintain a steadier dispatch routine.
A well-matched scrap briquetting press helps Ecuador machining operations gain control over chips—space, handling, and dispatch—by converting loose material into stackable briquettes.
Q1: Is briquetting worth it for small-to-mid workshops?
Yes, when chip storage and handling consumes time, space, and transport cost.
Q2: What affects briquette consistency?
Chip type, feed stability, and coolant level—standardize collection for best results.
Q3: How do I plan the installation area?
Allocate zones for chip collection, feeding access, briquette stacking, and loading lanes.
CTA: Share your chip sources, daily volume, and handling method. We’ll recommend an efficient briquetting station layout.
Many Ecuador workshops are expanding output, which increases chip generation and exposes a common bottleneck: chip handling does not scale well when it stays “manual and loose.” Loose chips are bulky, difficult to stage neatly, and often carry coolant that makes storage messy. As more recyclers and transport partners prefer consistent packaging, chip briquetting is becoming the practical upgrade path. A stable chips briquetting machine helps operations reduce clutter, improve safety around storage zones, and ship a more consistent material form—without relying on constant labor.
The customer’s challenges were typical for high-activity machining environments:
Frequent bin changes and forklift movements for low-density chips
Poor staging discipline because chips did not stack or load cleanly
Coolant contamination that made transport and storage untidy
Dispatch inefficiency due to loose, unpredictable volumes
They wanted a turnings briquetting press that creates a repeatable output format and reduces daily cleaning and re-handling.
Jiangsu Wanshida Hydraulic Machinery Co., Ltd. delivered 1 set Y83-2500 scrap chips briquetting press machine to anchor a simple operating routine:
Collect → Feed → Compress → Eject → Stack/Load.
The selection emphasized stable hydraulic pressure, fast cycle time, and a compact briquette geometry that supports stacking. By turning chips into uniform briquettes, the customer could organize storage and shipping more like a production flow than a cleanup job. This approach makes the metal chips briquetting press a daily tool for discipline and efficiency.
| Item | Specification (Y83-2500 Scrap Briquetting Press) |
|---|---|
| Front main cylinder | YG340/220-310, 2000 kN, stroke 310 mm, 1 pc |
| Back main cylinder | YG160/100-310, 500 kN, stroke 310 mm, 1 pc |
| Pushing cylinder | YG110/63-265, 55 kN, stroke 265 mm, 1 pc |
| Hydraulic system pressure | 25 MPa |
| Briquette size (D×H) | Ø100 × (50–60) mm |
| Cycle length | ~12 sec (excluding feed time) |
| Pump (1) | CBA1032F, 20 MPa, 32 ml/r, 1 set |
| Pump (2) | 80YCY14-1B, 31.5 MPa, 80 ml/r, 1 set |
| Motor | Y200L2-6, 22 kW, 970 rpm, 1 set |
| Capacity | ~800 kg/h |
| Weight | ~5000 kg |
The customer noted that the most visible change was cleanliness and order: briquettes replaced loose chip heaps, and staging became easier to manage. Next, internal transport improved because briquettes were easier to pick and stack. Finally, shipping became more predictable: uniform briquettes reduced loading friction and helped maintain a steadier dispatch routine.
A well-matched scrap briquetting press helps Ecuador machining operations gain control over chips—space, handling, and dispatch—by converting loose material into stackable briquettes.
Q1: Is briquetting worth it for small-to-mid workshops?
Yes, when chip storage and handling consumes time, space, and transport cost.
Q2: What affects briquette consistency?
Chip type, feed stability, and coolant level—standardize collection for best results.
Q3: How do I plan the installation area?
Allocate zones for chip collection, feeding access, briquette stacking, and loading lanes.
CTA: Share your chip sources, daily volume, and handling method. We’ll recommend an efficient briquetting station layout.