• What is screw oil press?
  • Screw oil press is a compact-structured oil extrusion machine used for extracting edible oil from more than twenty kinds of oilseeds such as peanut, soybean, flaxseed, sunflower seed, rapeseed, etc. Different from integrated screw oil press machine, it is more suitable to large-scale cooking oil plants which produce various grades cooking oil.
  • What seeds can a screw press machine process?
  • Our screw press machines are capable to process a variety of seeds and nuts such as Castor Seeds, Coconut / Copra, Cotton Seeds, Groundnuts / Peanuts / Earthnuts, Sunflower Seeds, Jatropha Seeds, Mustard Seeds / Rapeseeds / Canola Seeds, Neem Seeds, Palm Kernel, Sesame Seeds, Shea Nuts, Soyabean / Soybean, Flax Seeds, Karanja Seeds etc.
  • What is a screw oil press hopper?
  • Screw oil press hopper is a specially structured reversed fastigiated container to feed oilseeds. In the middle are a screw device and a stirring rod. When you turn on the oil press, put the materials in the hopper, the screw device will turn round to help oil seeds go down the chamber smoothly. This structure avoids feed materials blocking.
  • How does the oil press work?
  • When you turn on the oil press, put the materials in the hopper, the screw device will turn round to help oil seeds go down the chamber smoothly. This structure avoids feed materials blocking. No.26 Jingliu Road, Zhengzhou, China. No.26 Jingliu Road, Zhengzhou, China.
  • Who invented the continuous mechanical screw press?
  • Anderson International is the inventor of the continuous mechanical screw press. They have been a global leader in the vegetable/oilseed extraction industry for 130 years.
  • What is cold press oil processing?
  • Cold press oil processing is a method where heat exposure is minimized to offer the highest recovery of oil in a single pass. In oilseed processing, the primary goal is to extract as much oil as possible from the seed while consuming as little energy as possible. The result is two end products: oil and the leftover solids, traditionally called meal.