Skip to main content

Sandvik’s Korean roots

Sandvik has supplied an aggregate plant to the DooWon Development Company to process granite at its Jungeub quarry in JeonRa province, South Korea. The supplied equipment is processing blasted rock from a feed size of -900mm in order to produce aggregate for the Korean construction industry, with the product fractions ranging from 0-5mm to 13-25mm, at a required rate of production of 500tonnes per hour.
June 13, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Sandvik-supplied aggregate plant is processing granite at Doowon Development Company’s Jungeub quarry in JeonRa Province, South Korea
325 Sandvik has supplied an aggregate plant to the DooWon Development Company to process granite at its Jungeub quarry in JeonRa province, South Korea.

The supplied equipment is processing blasted rock from a feed size of -900mm in order to produce aggregate for the Korean construction industry, with the product fractions ranging from 0-5mm to 13-25mm, at a required rate of production of 500tonnes per hour.

The parent company of the DooWon Development Company, TaeShin, was established in 2004, with the DooWon quarry being established to deal with the high demand for crushed aggregates. Located 50km away from the existing TaeShin operation, the new quarry is said to have impressive aggregate production facilities, enabling TaeShin to be the largest aggregate producer in JeonRa province.

Current customers include the Korean Railways, mixed concrete and asphalt producers, as well as civil contractors. TaeShin now produces 2.5million tonnes of aggregate and sand a year through the use of three crushing plants. The plants have possessing operational capacities ranging from 200tonnes to 600tonnes per hour. The increased production means TaeShin now employ 42 people across the sites.

“It was my intention to install the best crushing plant (in Korea) in order to produce good product shape, supply a better quality of aggregate to my customers, and reduce our aggregate production costs,” says Kim HwanMoon, owner of TaeShin.

The granite at the Jungeub quarry is initially blasted in order to produce a coarse rock feed product of -900mm, with the material possessing a bulk density of 1.6 tons per m3. This potentially tricky feed product is initially put through a grizzly feeder to separate the -150mm product, before being fed into primary and secondary crushers, and then screened in order to produce material fractions of 0-5mm, 5-13mm, and 13- 25mm.

The products are produced through a process that was said to have been designed by Sandvik engineers in order to maximise production, with an ideal target rate of 500tonnes per hour. The equipment used to produce the required gradings’ are: one Grizzly feeder SV1652H; a Jaw Crusher CJ615; Cone Crusher CH660; Cone Crusher CH440; two Screen SC2463; and a DX700 drill rig.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Sandvik’s jaw-dropping Superior tooth jaw plates
    May 31, 2017
    Scottish Highlands-based company GF Job has been one of the first companies to trial Sandvik’s Superior tooth jaw plates. Sandvik said that, among other benefits, it has doubled the lifetime of the company’s jaw plates. GF Job, based near Inverness, offers earthmoving, civil engineering, heavy haulage and recycling to contract crushing. It owns five aggregates quarries as well as a wide range of Sandvik mobile crushing and screening equipment, including four tracked jaw crushers. Predominantly, the quarries
  • New machinery helps boost quarry production
    July 28, 2015
    A quarry in the US has managed to boost production by around 30%, thanks to the acquisition of new equipment. Replacing the old crusher at the Lafarge Pitt River Quarry has made a massive increase in production capacity, helped by improvements to the existing crushing circuit. ELRUS Aggregate Systems provided advice on optimizing throughput, with the facility further improved with the addition of a new CH660 cone crusher from Sandvik Construction.
  • Aggregates production innovations delivering efficiency
    August 1, 2017
    EvoQuip, the newest division of Terex Corporation, is launching a Cobra 230 impact crusher later this year, to sit alongside the Cobra 260. The 24tonne machine will offer a production capacity of 140-150tonnes/hour in asphalt and construction recycling. The Cobra 230 is 11.3m long and 2.46m wide, or 5.15m wide with a side conveyor. It features a quick set-up time and the machine can be moved onsite without having to stop the crusher. Keestrack says that its novel H4 tracked cone crusher is light and compact
  • Sandvik improving crushing and screening at Japanese operation
    January 30, 2017
    A Japanese materials recycling operation close to the capital Tokyo is boosting operating efficiency with the addition of new crushing and screening equipment to its machine fleet. The firm, Tetsugen, is now using the latest cone crusher technology from Sandvik to optimise its slag recycling operations. The Tetsugen Corporation chose two cone crushers and one screen to produce a variety of aggregates. The three machines were selected based on their performance and reliability as well as to the availability