Skip to main content

Fraccaroli & Balzan targets large quarries with its new filter press

Fraccaroli & Balzan, which designs, manufactures and installs waste water treatment systems, is showcasing its biggest filter press yet at bauma 2013. Previously the Italian firm only made lateral beam-type filter presses, which can only go up to a certain size and capacity. Now Fraccaroli & Balzan has developed high beam filter presses, which can be much larger and designed for quarries that need to process high volumes of material. “This filter press is for big quarries with big production that prefer to
January 6, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
Fraccaroli & Balzan, which designs, manufactures and installs waste water treatment systems, is showcasing its biggest filter press yet at 688 Bauma 2013.

Previously the Italian firm only made lateral beam-type filter presses, which can only go up to a certain size and capacity. Now Fraccaroli & Balzan has developed high beam filter presses, which can be much larger and designed for quarries that need to process high volumes of material.

“This filter press is for big quarries with big production that prefer to have one large machine rather than two smaller ones,” said Fraccaroli & Balzan’s manager Francesco Zavarise. “Some companies make either high beam or lateral beam filter presses; we have both so that we can supply smaller and bigger customers.”

Fraccaroli & Balzan supplied the first high-beam machine, 18m long with 140 plates each 2m square, to a quarry in Northern Italy. It is currently installing a second one at a site in Estonia and has others on order, said Zavarise.

With 80 employees, Fraccaroli & Balzan offers a turnkey service to its clients in several sectors including quarrying and tunnelling, supplying all the elements of a water treatment plant. Engineers travel from its HQ in Northern Italy to install, commission and test the machines.

Fraccaroli & Balzan is a family firm, which Zavarise said offers benefits to the client. “We are relatively small but we are very flexible,” he said. “We design our machines completely in-house, mechanically and electrically. That means that all the know-how for the filter presses and the clarifiers is in our company.”

The firm exports around the world, with plants in countries including the US, Canada, Australia, Europe, Russia and Mexico.

Stand: C2.217

%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 2 78883 0 oLinkExternal www.FraccaroliBalzan.it www.FraccaroliBalzan.it false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=78883 false false%>

 

%$Linker: 2 Internal <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 2 11560 0 oLinkInternal <span class="oLinkInternal"><span class="oLinkInternal">View more videos</span></span> Video false /event-news/bauma-2013/video/ true false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Tecnoidea Impianti plants reputation worldwide
    April 9, 2013
    With over 3,600,000m³ of water purified daily in more than 3,000 of its plants all over the world, Tecnoidea Impianti is one of the leading companies worldwide for water purification plants and sludge treatment systems. Its closed-cycle plants are aimed at marble and granites, aggregates and soil washing, tunnelling and concrete areas.
  • Bell will push the boundaries in ADT design
    February 6, 2013
    Bell Equipment is working on its biggest ever truck, which will offer a capacity of 55tonnes. A launch date has not yet been revealed for the hauler and technical details have yet to be revealed, however the machine will have a 4x4 drive system. Marc Schürmann managing director of Bell Equipment Europe said prototype testing for the machine will commence later this year. He said “Our competitors will be the smaller class of rigid haulers,” and he added that the aim is to offer lower fuel consumption and cap
  • Getech’s versatile sludge treatment solution
    April 5, 2013
    Due to an innovative and strong frame design and the use of premium raw materials and components, Getech/Gennaretti centrifuges can be employed across mining, tunnelling, petroleum and chemical industry-based sludge treatment processes. They can also be built in mobile plants on containers, easy to transport to remote areas and quick to install, able to manage sludge volumes going from 5 to 150m³ per hour.
  • High mobility is claimed for CIFA’s concrete plant
    February 7, 2013
    High mobility is claimed for CIFA’s mobile concrete batching plant, the CIFAMOBILE 50. “This is the first ever CIFA concrete batching plant we’ve built. It’s highly mobile and can be transported on wheels,” said Marco Brambati, director of marketing and business planning at the firm. The machine features a mixer that can produce 1/3 of concrete/cycle. This DNA 1.0 mixer is the smallest in the CIFA range (while the largest has a 3m3 capacity) and can deliver up to 50m3/hour of ready-mixed concrete. The plant