Screened Coal
Screened Coal For Better Industrial Usability
We screen coal into practical industrial sizes so buyers reduce the uncertainty of mixed-size material, excess fines and unsuitable lumps — 0–6 mm, 6–20 mm and 20–50 mm, subject to stock and feasibility.
Why Screening Matters
Know What Is Being Loaded
Size variation directly affects handling, feeding, combustion and plant-level efficiency. A mixed truck may carry fines, usable mid-size material and oversized lumps together. Screening creates clear product categories so you can match coal to your equipment.
| Size | Common Name | Typical Buyer Use | Commercial Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0–6 mm | Fine coal | Fine-coal consumption, blending, or systems that handle smaller material. | Fines percentage and moisture clearly aligned. |
| 6–20 mm | Screened mid-size | Common industrial size for many boiler and furnace applications. | Preferred where mid-size handling is required. |
| 20–50 mm | Coarse coal | Applications needing larger pieces and lower fine content. | Oversize/undersize tolerance agreed in advance. |
Screening Process
- Raw or mixed stock assessed for size distribution.
- Material screened into practical fractions per plant setup and buyer demand.
- Separate piles maintained where possible to reduce mixing.
- Loading planned by product category and order terms.
- Final product subject to natural variation, handling and agreed tolerance.
Honest noteScreening does not guarantee zero fines — coal is a natural, handled material. The correct approach is to agree an acceptable size tolerance and product basis before order.
Need A Specific Size Band?
Tell us your required size, tolerance and application — we’ll confirm current size-wise availability.
FAQ
Common Questions
Does screening guarantee zero fines?
No. Coal is a natural material and handling creates fines. The correct approach is to agree acceptable tolerance and product basis.
Can I visit the screening site?
A plant or yard visit can be discussed for qualified buyers, subject to safety and operational permissions.