In Brazil, scrap yards are increasingly judged by how smoothly they can ship. Mixed heavy scrap from demolition and fabrication often arrives oversized, and if sizing is delayed, it quickly turns into yard congestion, repeated crane moves, and last-minute cutting before trucks arrive. To reduce “rush cutting” and stabilize dispatch, more operators are installing a dedicated container scrap shear as a front-end sizing station—so output length becomes predictable, stacking becomes cleaner, and loading stays on schedule.
To support daily heavy scrap sizing, a Brazilian customer installed 1 set Q43W-6300A horizontal container scrap metal shear machine. The machine is designed to convert mixed heavy scrap into loadable pieces with a steady cutting rhythm and controlled staging, helping yards maintain a repeatable “feed → hold → cut → discharge → stack/load” workflow.
| Item | Specification (Q43W-6300A) |
|---|---|
| Cutting force | 2890×2 kN (630–640 ton class), 2 cutting cylinders |
| Hold cylinder | 1153 kN (118 ton), 1 pc |
| Feeding mouth (L×W) | 3700 × 2500 mm |
| Output mouth (W×H) | 1500 × 400 mm |
| Blade length | 1500 mm |
| Cutting speed | 3–4 times/min |
| Capacity | 8–10 t/h |
| System pressure | 22.0 MPa (Max 25.5 MPa) |
| Cooling | Air cooling system |
| Motors | 45 kW × 3 sets |
| Pumps | 160 ml/r, 35 MPa × 3 sets |
| Control | PLC automatic + Remote (Siemens) |
| Overall size | 8300 × 2250 × 2900 mm |
| Weight | About 29 ton |
Early operation feedback highlighted three practical improvements:
For dispatch-driven yards, the main value of a 630-ton container scrap shear is not just force—it’s rhythm. When cutting becomes a repeatable step rather than a last-minute fix, yards gain better control of space, handling time, and shipping reliability.
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In Brazil, scrap yards are increasingly judged by how smoothly they can ship. Mixed heavy scrap from demolition and fabrication often arrives oversized, and if sizing is delayed, it quickly turns into yard congestion, repeated crane moves, and last-minute cutting before trucks arrive. To reduce “rush cutting” and stabilize dispatch, more operators are installing a dedicated container scrap shear as a front-end sizing station—so output length becomes predictable, stacking becomes cleaner, and loading stays on schedule.
To support daily heavy scrap sizing, a Brazilian customer installed 1 set Q43W-6300A horizontal container scrap metal shear machine. The machine is designed to convert mixed heavy scrap into loadable pieces with a steady cutting rhythm and controlled staging, helping yards maintain a repeatable “feed → hold → cut → discharge → stack/load” workflow.
| Item | Specification (Q43W-6300A) |
|---|---|
| Cutting force | 2890×2 kN (630–640 ton class), 2 cutting cylinders |
| Hold cylinder | 1153 kN (118 ton), 1 pc |
| Feeding mouth (L×W) | 3700 × 2500 mm |
| Output mouth (W×H) | 1500 × 400 mm |
| Blade length | 1500 mm |
| Cutting speed | 3–4 times/min |
| Capacity | 8–10 t/h |
| System pressure | 22.0 MPa (Max 25.5 MPa) |
| Cooling | Air cooling system |
| Motors | 45 kW × 3 sets |
| Pumps | 160 ml/r, 35 MPa × 3 sets |
| Control | PLC automatic + Remote (Siemens) |
| Overall size | 8300 × 2250 × 2900 mm |
| Weight | About 29 ton |
Early operation feedback highlighted three practical improvements:
For dispatch-driven yards, the main value of a 630-ton container scrap shear is not just force—it’s rhythm. When cutting becomes a repeatable step rather than a last-minute fix, yards gain better control of space, handling time, and shipping reliability.
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