PP rigid scrap can be a profitable feedstock—if you control contamination, moisture, and polymer mix. For plant managers and industrial buyers, the “right” PP rigid recycling machine is not one box. It is a line that matches your incoming material (crates, buckets, automotive parts, purge, sprues) and the product you sell (washed flakes or pellets).
This guide explains how PP rigid recycling lines work, what features change output quality, and how to choose a configuration that fits your site and budget. Where it helps, the guide links to Energycle equipment pages you can use as reference points.
Quick takeaways
– If you sell pellets, design the line around wash quality + drying + melt filtration, not just size reduction.
– PP often floats in water (density typically below 1.0 g/cm³), so float-sink separation can remove heavier polymers and dirt.
– The fastest ways to ruin output quality are mixed polymers, tramp metal, E wet flakes going into extrusion.
– A good project spec starts with four numbers: kg/ora, contamination level, target product (flakes vs pellets), and available utilities (power, water, steam/hot water).
What Counts as “PP Rigid” (and Why It’s Different)
“Rigid PP” usually means thicker molded parts: buckets, crates, injection-molded runners, caps, furniture parts, and some automotive components. Compared with film, rigid PP:
– Breaks into chips/flakes more predictably after shredding or granulation
– Often carries labels, paper, and adhesive, which pushes washing requirements up
– Can include filled grades (talc, glass fiber) that increase wear and change pellet properties
PP is commonly identified as plastic recycling code #5, and its melting point is often cited around 170 °C for isotactic PP. Its density is typically below water, which is why float-sink tanks are widely used for separation.
Flakes or Pellets? Decide Before You Buy Equipment
Many projects fail at the business level because the line produces the wrong “product.”
– Washed flakes (regrind) can sell well for non-critical applications and require less capital than pelletizing.
– Pellet improve handling, dosing, and consistency for injection molding/extrusion buyers—but only if you control washing, drying, and melt filtration.
How a PP Rigid Recycling Line Works (Stage by Stage)
Use this as a reference flow. Real lines add or remove steps based on contamination and the output spec.
| Palcoscenico | Goal | Common Equipment | What to Watch |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-sort | Reduce polymer mix and protect cutters | Manual sorting, magnets, metal detection | Tramp metal, PVC/PET mix, heavily filled parts |
| Riduzione delle dimensioni | Make uniform pieces for washing | Single-shaft shredder for rigid plastics, granulator | Knife condition, screen size, dust/fines generation |
| Lavaggio | Remove labels, dirt, oils, organics | Rigid plastic washing line, friction washer | Water quality, label glue, residence time, wear |
| Separazione galleggiante-affondante | Split PP/PE from heavier contaminants | Floating separation tank | Tank flow control, carryover, sludge removal |
| Asciugatura | Lower moisture before extrusion | Centrifugal dryer + hot air (as needed) | Moisture at discharge, fines plugging, bearing lubrication |
| Pelletizing (optional) | Homogenize and filter for consistent pellets | PP/HDPE flake pelletizing system, melt filter, vacuum vent | Melt pressure, screen change frequency, odor/volatiles |
Stage 1: Size Reduction for Rigid PP (Shredder vs Granulator)
Rigid PP can arrive as bulky parts, thick runners, or stacked crates. Your goal is stable feeding, controlled particle size, and minimum metal risk.
Typical choices:
– Trituratore monoalbero for bulky items and high thickness variation (less dust; stronger tolerance to irregular shapes)
– Granulator/crusher for parts that already fit in the cutting chamber (more uniform flakes; screen controls size)
If your input includes big parts (pallets, thick crates), start with shredding, then move to granulation. For large throughput or thick-wall items, review Energycle’s extra-large rigid plastic granulator machines.
Stage 2: Washing and Separation (Where Quality Is Won or Lost)
Most buyer complaints about recycled PP trace back to “invisible” contamination: glue, paper fibers, food residues, fine dirt, or mixed polymers.
For rigid PP, washing is usually built around:
– Pre-wash or soak to loosen dirt and organics
– Lavaggio a frizione to remove surface films, paper fibers, and label residue
– Separazione galleggiante-affondante to remove heavier contaminants (including many non-PP polymers and grit)
If you process post-consumer buckets and crates with labels, plan for more aggressive washing than post-industrial runners.
Stage 3: Drying and Moisture Control Before Extrusion
If you pelletize, wet flakes cause steam, bubbles, and unstable pressure. A mechanical dewatering step (centrifugal) usually comes first, with hot-air drying added when the spec requires lower moisture.
Stage 4 (Optional): Pelletizing for Saleable rPP Pellets
Pelletizing does three jobs at once:
1) Filters out remaining fine contamination in the melt
2) Mixes material for more consistent flow and color
3) Converts flakes into pellets that feed cleanly into molding/extrusion lines
For equipment options, start with Energycle’s Pellettizzatori di plastica and then narrow to a PP-focused configuration such as the PP/HDPE rigid plastic flake pelletizing system.
Features That Matter When Comparing PP Rigid Recycling Machines
When buyers ask about “features,” focus on what changes output quality and uptime:
| Caratteristica | Operational Advantage |
|---|---|
| Automated Control Systems (PLC) | Shows the real process signals (amps, water flow, temperatures, melt pressure) so you can keep quality stable across shifts. |
| Energy-Efficient Motors | Reduces kWh/ton when the line runs near its design point and avoids long overload cycles. |
| Design modulare | Lets you add steps when your feedstock changes (hot wash, extra separation, extra drying, pelletizing) without rebuilding the whole line. |
| Closed-Loop Water Filtration | Reduces fresh-water draw and keeps the wash stage stable by controlling solids and oil carryover. |
| Wear-Part Strategy | Accessible knives, screens, and liners cut downtime; correct metallurgy matters more than a low purchase price. |
Selection Checklist: How to Specify the Right Line
Start with your input, not with a generic “PP machine” label.
| Your Feedstock | Typical Challenges | Line Choices That Usually Help |
|---|---|---|
| Post-industrial runners, purge, sprues | Low dirt; occasional metal; wide part thickness | Shredder or granulator + cold wash + strong drying; pelletizing if you need consistent pellets |
| Post-consumer buckets/crates with labels | Paper, glue, organics, sand | More washing energy (friction + longer residence) + float-sink separation + extra filtration |
| Automotive PP parts | Mixed polymers, paints/coatings, filled grades | Sorting strategy first (polymer mix control), then washing; plan higher wear and tighter QC |
Practical selection questions to answer before you request a quote:
– What is the incoming mix (PP-only, PP/PE blend, unknown)?
– What contaminants show up weekly (labels, sand, metal, oils)?
– What is your product spec (washed flakes vs pellets, and target applications)?
– Do you need hot water/steam, and do you have wastewater constraints?
– What’s the target throughput in kg/h, and how many shifts will you run?
Quality Control (QC): Tests Buyers Actually Care About
If you want repeat buyers, tie process control to measurable QC items:
– Visual contamination and odor (basic, but it catches most failures fast)
– Umidità at flake discharge (critical if you pelletize)
– Melt flow rate (MFR/MFI) as a quick indicator of polymer degradation and batch consistency (commonly measured per ASTM D1238)
– Polymer identification during sorting (resin identification codes are standardized under ASTM D7611)
Domande frequenti (FAQ)
Can I run PP and HDPE together in the same line?
You can wash them together, but selling mixed PP/HDPE pellets is harder unless your buyer accepts the blend. If your goal is a PP pellet product, invest in sorting upstream and treat polymer mix as a top KPI.
Do I need pelletizing, or can I sell washed flakes?
Sell flakes when your buyers can tolerate more variation and you want lower capital cost. Pelletize when your buyers need stable feeding and tighter consistency, or when your sales channel strongly prefers pellets.
Why does my “clean” PP still cause black specks or gel in pellets?
Common causes include degraded polymer (overheating), residual paper/adhesive that carbonizes, and fine contaminants that bypass washing. If you pelletize, melt filtration and stable extrusion conditions matter as much as washing.
What is the first machine to size for a new plant?
Size the line to your bottleneck. For dirty post-consumer feedstock, washing and drying often limit throughput more than shredding.
If you want a starting point for an equipment list, review Energycle’s rigid plastic washing line for PP/HDPE/PVC and add pelletizing only after you define your product spec.
Riferimenti
- ISO — ISO 15270 (Plastics: Guidelines for recovery and recycling)
- ASTM — ASTM D1238 (Melt Flow Rates of Thermoplastics by Extrusion Plastometer)
- ASTM — ASTM D7611 (Resin Identification Coding System)
- Encyclopaedia Britannica — Polypropylene (melting point, resin code)
- Wikipedia — Polypropylene (density range)



