Skip to main content

Haver & Boecker’s mixed screen media options boosts efficiency

Haver & Boecker recently showcased at the AGG1 2018 exhibition in Houston, US, its blended screen media options for each vibrating screen deck. The Canadian aggregates equipment manufacturer says that the blended screen media approach offers improved efficiency by extending screen media life and minimising issues such as blinding and pegging. The company’s technicians work with producers, evaluating their applications, challenges and goals to customise screen media selection. Before making recommendations
November 7, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
Haver & Boecker recently showcased at the AGG1 2018 exhibition in Houston, US, its blended screen media options for each vibrating screen deck.


The Canadian aggregates equipment manufacturer says that the blended screen media approach offers improved efficiency by extending screen media life and minimising issues such as blinding and pegging. The company’s technicians work with producers, evaluating their applications, challenges and goals to customise screen media selection.

Before making recommendations, 7142 Haver & Boecker technicians examine discarded screen media for signs of wear and breakage.  Technicians then evaluate the vibrating screen in operation, looking for indications of blinding and pegging as well as evaluating the quantity and characteristics of the specific material being screened.

Each phase of screening is matched with the ideal screen media to address the challenges of that phase from layered to basic to sharp. The recommended media styles which could range from polyurethane to rubber to metal or woven wire reduces wear and maximises productivity.

In many applications, operators look for greater wear life on the screen’s feed end — at the layered phase. Haver & Boecker says that this can be accomplished by installing a section of heavy-duty screen media, such as Haver & Boecker’s Ty-Max, Ty-Dura or Ty-Plate. These offer a reinforced design by incorporating polyurethane, rubber or metal plate to withstand high top sizes and abrasion.

In the middle of the deck, Ty-Wire tends to be a popular choice since it gives operators the ideal combination of wear life and open area where most screening — or basic screening —  takes place.

Using woven wire or self-cleaning screen media at the discharge end — where sharp screening occurs — provides maximum open area at the end of the deck to allow any remaining undersized particles to fall through and for near-sized material to pass. This prevents contamination of the final product.

Ty-Wire combines woven wire with an engineered composite to achieve open area closer to wire cloth, but with four to seven times longer wear life. Ty-Wire weighs less than woven wire, making it safer to handle and easier to install. It’s an excellent hybrid product.

Haver & Boecker’s polyurethane screen media is manufactured out of Tyrethane, the manufacturer’s signature blend of polyurethane. Chemists developed Tyrethane to offer the best combination of open area and wear life for both wet and dry applications. Tyrethane is poured open cast, resulting in 1.5 to 2 times longer wear life than injection-moulded products.

In addition, open cast polyurethane permanently hardens when cured to maintain its chemical properties, so it resists wear and tear. Injection-moulded screens can soften when the temperature rises during screening, resulting in shorter wear life.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Efficient aggregate production technology
    July 13, 2020
    Efficient aggregate production technology is now coming to market, offering lower cost/tonne production
  • Help is on the way: RoadResource.org
    November 29, 2018
    RoadResource.org as a go-to website for surfacing information is now live, explains Doug Hogue, of VSS Macropaver When RoadResouce.org went live – quietly - in July it was the end of two years of hard work by three US associations for pavement preservation. But there was no grand party or ceremonial pushing of the “go live” button, says Doug Hogue, vice president and general manager of VSS Macropaver. “For all of us in the industry July is a busy period that left little time to celebrate on the ope
  • Defining the standards for asphalt road surfaces
    February 20, 2012
    Materials used to construct roads must meet defined standards to offer a variety of solutions including durability, smoothness and long life. The need for the regular testing of materials used in highway construction is now a must on all projects. It is essential to make sure that the materials used in producing roads meet defined standards and offer durability, smoothness and long life.
  • Asphalt reinforcement extends road life
    July 12, 2012
    Special reinforcements can extend the life of an old or new road, and also offer environmental benefits. Patrick Smith reports. Asphalt reinforcement can extend the service life of a resurfaced road by a factor of 3-4, says Huesker, developers of the HaTelit range of asphalt reinforcement. Aimed at preventing the propagation of reflective cracking from an old asphalt layer through a new surface course, Huesker claims the formation of reflective cracking is considerably delayed or even completely prevented u