Superior launches inclined screen

By |  December 19, 2016
Superior's Anthem Inclined Screen can be engineered with a single- or double-shaft drive depending the the customer’s needs. Photo courtesy of Superior

Superior’s Anthem inclined screen can be engineered with a single- or double-shaft drive depending the the customer’s needs.

Superior Industries Inc. added the Anthem inclined screen to its product line.

According to Superior, the Anthem is its first inclined screen and third vibratory product release of 2016.

The Anthem inclined screen features bottle jack lifting points that simplify and speed spring replacement and improve safety, as well as a segmented belt guard that requires only one person to remove and return the guards during maintenance, Superior says.

“One of the most unique features is our one-style shaft design for all models of our inclined screen,” says John Garrison, vice president of sales at Superior. “Typically, inclined screen shafts are custom machined to the weight of a specific unit, which creates long lead times for replacement parts. To create an eccentric offset on the Anthem screen, owners and operators use a standard stock shaft and bolt-on weights.”

The Anthem inclined screen is engineered with a single- or double-shaft drive depending on the the customer’s needs, Superior says. The company designs and manufactures the screen in double-, triple- and quad-deck configurations for 5-ft. × 16-ft., 6-ft. × 16-ft., 6-ft. × 20-ft., 7-ft. × 20-ft., 8-ft. × 20-ft. and 8-ft. × 24-ft. models.

Superior Industries, headquartered in Morris, Minnesota, engineers and manufactures bulk material processing and handling equipment and components related to machinery. It supplies bulk crushing, screening, washing and conveying systems for the construction aggregate, mining, bulk terminals, agriculture, power and biomass industries.

Allison Kral

About the Author:

Allison Kral is the former senior digital media manager for North Coast Media (NCM). She completed her undergraduate degree at Ohio University where she received a Bachelor of Science in magazine journalism from the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism. She works across a number of digital platforms, which include creating e-newsletters, writing articles and posting across social media sites. She also creates content for NCM's Portable Plants magazine, GPS World magazine and Geospatial Solutions. Her understanding of the ever-changing digital media world allows her to quickly grasp what a target audience desires and create content that is appealing and relevant for any client across any platform.

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