Roller Conveyors: The Conveyor Belt for Packaging Boxes
Roller conveyors are like moving railway tracks for goods, and they are particularly well-suited for rigid packaging boxes with sharp edges. From cardboard boxes in courier sorting centers to crates of soda in beverage factories, and neatly stacked wooden crates in warehouses, any object with a flat bottom can be steadily transported by these rotating metal rollers. Specially designed gaps can also work with sorting systems, allowing goods to "exit" the conveyor mid-route.
Chain Conveyors: The Strongmen of Heavy Industry
When ordinary conveyor equipment struggles with heavy loads, chain conveyors come into play. Their metal chains can easily move car bodies on assembly lines, transport red-hot steel billets in metallurgical workshops, or convey heavy hoppers full of ore. Some models even have hooks, specifically designed to handle oversized, irregularly shaped objects, such as solid wood wardrobes in furniture factories or boiler components in machinery workshops.
Belt Conveyors: The Transporters of Bulk Materials
From sand and gravel at construction sites to wheat in grain silos, from crushed coal in coal mines to granules in fertilizer plants, these easily scattered materials are common cargo for belt conveyors. The conveyor belts, made of rubber or fiber, form a trough to prevent granules from spilling; food-grade versions can even directly transport ingredients such as flour and sugar. Inclined versions can even transport goods to mixing tanks three stories high.
