Understanding VSI Crushers
Vertical Shaft Impact (VSI) crushers are specialized machines designed to produce well-shaped, cubical aggregate particles and high-quality manufactured sand. Unlike compression crushers (jaw and cone), VSI crushers use high-speed impact to fracture material, creating the fractured faces that produce excellent particle interlocking in concrete and asphalt mixtures.
How VSI Crushers Work
VSI crushers accelerate material through a feed tube into the center of the rotor, which propels the material outward at high velocity against the crushing chamber surfaces. Material impacts against the anvil ring and other particles already in the chamber, creating fracture through impact rather than compression.
Two Basic VSI Designs:
- Rock-on-Rock: Material impacts against other material and the crushing chamber lining. Preferred for abrasive materials and producing manufactured sand.
- Rock-on-Anvil: Material impacts primarily against anvils (break points). Better for producing coarse aggregate and handling less-abrasive materials.
Best Applications for VSI Crushers
1. Manufactured Sand (M-Sand) Production
VSI crushers excel at producing manufactured sand from hard rock feed. The high-velocity impact creates cubical particles with controlled fines content — ideal for high-strength concrete and premium asphalt mixtures. VSI sand typically has a higher shape index (cubicity) than sand produced by cone crushers.
2. Cubical Aggregate Production
For producing cubical coarse aggregate, VSI crushers can be used in the final crushing stage to reshape flat or elongated particles from the cone crusher product. This improves the aggregate's particle shape index and increases the value of the final product.
3. Recycling and Minor Volume Minerals
VSI crushers handle concrete recycling, glass processing and other materials where shaping is more important than high throughput. The relatively simple rotor design allows cost-effective processing of lower-volume materials.
VSI Crusher — Producing Cubical Aggregate and Manufactured Sand
VSI Operating Considerations
Cascade Feed Control:
VSI crushers require a consistent feed of material cascading into the rotor. Too little feed causes excessive wear and poor product shape. Too much feed causes packing and reduced crushing efficiency. Proper feed box design and distribution are critical.
CSS (Closed-Side Setting) Adjustment:
Unlike cone crushers, VSI CSS is determined by the rotor speed and the ratio of feed rate to cascade feed rate. Higher rotor speeds produce finer product with more cubical particles but increase wear.
Moisture Content:
VSI crushers work best with dry to slightly moist material. High moisture can cause material buildup in the crushing chamber and reduce efficiency. For moist materials, pre-drying or blending with drier material may be necessary.
Wear and Maintenance
VSI crushers typically have higher wear rates than cone crushers due to the high-velocity impacts. Key wear components include:
- Rotor tips and wear bands
- Anvil ring (in rock-on-anvil designs)
- Cascade feed lips
- Discharge chamber liners
Wear part life varies significantly based on material abrasiveness, feed size and operating parameters. Regular inspection and timely replacement prevent excessive wear damage to the rotor and chamber.
WSHT offers VSI crushers in a range of capacities and configurations, with applications engineering support to ensure optimal performance for your specific material and product requirements.




