Sunday, December 1, 2013

Central Mixed Concrete

Central Mixed Concrete
Central Mixed Concrete
Central-mixing concrete batch plants include a stationary, plant-mounted mixer that mixes the concrete before it is discharged into a truck mixer. Central-mix plants are sometimes referred to as wet batch or pre-mix plants. The truck mixer is used primarily as an agitating haul unit at a central mix operation. Dump trucks or other non-agitating units are sometimes be used for low slump and mass concrete pours supplied by central mix plants. About 20% of the concrete plants in the use a central mixer. Principal advantages include:

·     Faster production capability than a transit-mix plant
·     Improved concrete quality control and consistency and
·     Reduced wear on the truck mixer drums.

There are several types of plant mixers, including:
·     Tilt drum mixer
·     Horizontal shaft paddle mixer
·     Dual shaft paddle mixer
·     Pan mixer
·     Slurry mixer


The tilting drum mixer is the most common American central mixing unit. Many central-mix drums can accommodate up to 12 yd3 and can mix in excess of 200 yd3per hour. They are fast and efficient, but can be maintenance-intensive since they include several moving parts that are subjected to a heavy load.
Horizontal shaft mixers have a stationary shell and rotating central shaft with blades or paddles. They have either one or two mixing shafts that impart significantly higher horsepower in mixing than the typical drum mixer.
Pan mixers are generally lower capacity mixers at about 4 to 5 yd3 and are used at precast concrete plants.
Slurry Mixing The slurry mixer is a relative newcomer to concrete mixing technology. It can be added onto a dry-batch plant and works by mixing cement and water that is then loaded as slurry into a truck mixer along with the aggregates. It is reported to benefit from high-energy mixing. Another advantage is that the slurry mixer reduces the amount of cement dust that escapes into the air.


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