Skip to main content

Sandvik’s jaw-dropping Superior tooth jaw plates

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
May 31, 2017 Read time: 3 mins
Sandvik’s Superior way to eat up the tonnes
Scottish Highlands-based company GF Job has been one of the first companies to trial Sandvik’s Superior tooth jaw plates.


325 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' material is granite and glacial cobble, which is hard and abrasive. One of the jaw crushers, a Sandvik QJ341, is employed in the same granite quarry for the majority of the year to produce 500,000tonnes of 127mm crushed material, run to feed an aggregate processing plant.

The company is continually testing different jaws for signs of durability. On this application both the heavy-duty 20%-style square tooth jaws and the conventional 14% corrugated jaws have been used and a history of tonnages produced from each jaw has been recorded to give a true account of performance in relation to costs. For this reason they decided to trial the new Superior tooth jaw plates.

Sandvik says that its Superior tooth jaw plates have been designed around adding material where it matters most. The profile allows for a higher percentage of the jaw to be worn which results in longer wear life and less manganese waste. The improved tooth profile also allows for better breakage and improved material flow. This results in a more cubical product and a higher quality product shape.

The GF Job trial showed that average output increased from 200tonnes/hour to 250tonnes/hour while wear rates increased upwards of 30%.

“In this particular granite application previous jaw plates have been ranging between 20,000-30,000tonnes of crushed material and that’s the life of the jaws,” said Graeme Watt, plant manager for GF Job. “With the new jaw we’re up to 50,000-55,000tonnes for the life of the jaw. If you go into a limestone quarry you’ll get double, but this is a hard abrasive material.”

He also said that the new jaw plates are creating a better shape of product, but also crushing far more economically. “It’s reducing the load on the crusher, therefore you’re creating better fuel economy while also reducing the physical hardship on that machine.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Efficient recycling with FAE
    June 11, 2020
    FAE has updated its heavyweight, multitask attachment with improvements to the systems that control working depth and water injection
  • Machine and machine control innovations in concrete paving
    June 28, 2013
    Machine innovations and machine control advances are the latest news in the concrete paving sector - Mike Woof reports. While machine control systems were pioneered in the concrete paving market, continuous refinement of the technologies is offering major improvements for customers. Customers have a choice now of more than one supplier while the packages are said to be more user-friendly than before. And in addition, the systems themselves can be more closely integrated into the machines due to advances mad
  • UK trialling hazard warning technology
    November 26, 2024
    Results from a project by the UK’s department of transport and AECOM – using Heads-Up technology from Acusensus, has underlined scale of distracted driving and lack of seatbelt use.
  • World of Asphalt/AGG1 Aggregates Forum & Expo
    April 13, 2012
    World of Asphalt 2012 and the co-located AGG1 Aggregates Forum & Expo will be the largest in the history of the two events.