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Principle
of Operation
The main screening assembly of a TITAN screener is suspended on rugged
springs that allow it to vibrate freely while minimizing power consumption and
preventing vibration transmission to the floor. The assembly is equipped with
one imbalanced-weight gyratory motor that creates multi-plane inertial
vibration for the purpose of controlling the flow path of material on screen
surfaces, and maximizing the rate at which material passes through the screen.
Material is fed onto the center of the screen, causing particles
larger than screen apertures to travel across the screen surface in controlled
pathways, and exit through a discharge spout located at the screen’s periphery,
while particles smaller than screen apertures pass through the screen onto a
lower screen or exit through a lower discharge spout.
Single-deck screeners are generally utilized for “scalping” or “sifting”
(removing a small percentage of oversize material through the upper discharge
spout), for “de-dusting” (removing a small percentage of undersize material
through the lower discharge spout), or for “dewatering” (removing liquid
through the lower discharge spout).
Multi-deck screeners (two-deck shown) are generally utilized for
”classifying” of particles in three to five predetermined sizes. 
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