A single shaft shredder looks simple from the outside: one rotor, one chamber, one pusher. In the field, uptime and throughput depend on details—how consisten...
Single Screw Pelletizer for PET Flakes: Working Principle & Sizing
Single screw extruders are common in plastics processing, and they can also pelletize PET bottle flakes into rPET pellets—if the line controls moisture, volat...
Rigid vs. Flexible Plastic Recycling: Equipment Selection Guide

Rigid plastics (containers, crates, pipes) and flexible plastics (film, bags, woven material) are not just “different polymers.” They behave differently in...
Rigid Plastic Recycling: Top 5 Technology Trends for 2026

Rigid plastic recycling continues to move toward higher consistency: tighter contamination windows, more repeatable washing performance, and better process moni...
Rigid Plastic Recycling Machine Selection: Capacity, Layout, and Specs

Rigid plastics—such as containers, bottles, crates, pipes, and industrial packaging—represent a high-value but technically demanding segment of plastic recy...
Recycling Plant Layout Design: Buffers, Zoning, and Optional Devices

Recycling lines rarely fail because the core machine can’t melt or cut plastic. They fail because the plant layout creates bottlenecks: poor material flow, un...
Recycled PVC Market Demand: Applications and Buyer Requirements

Demand for recycled PVC (rPVC) is closely tied to building and industrial products: windows, profiles, pipes, flooring, and other durable applications. These ma...
Post-Industrial vs. Post-Consumer Plastics: Equipment Needs and RFQ Tips

Two plants can both say they “recycle plastic” and still require very different equipment. The biggest divider is where the feedstock comes from: Post-indu...
Polystyrene Recycling Machines: Equipment Options & RFQ Checklist

Polystyrene recycling is often described as difficult, but the barrier is usually not chemistry—it’s collection and transport. Expanded polystyrene (EPS) fo...
Plastic Recycling Wastewater Treatment: A Closed-Loop Water Guide

Plastic washing lines move a lot of water. If you let water quality drift, you see the impact immediately: dirt redeposits on flakes, pumps clog, friction washe...

