Por qué las cuchillas de peletizadora CPM son ideales para materiales de alta carga

When pelletizing gets tough—abrasive fillers, intermittent impacts, wet chambers, and heat spikes—the wrong pelletizer blade turns your line into a downtime machine. In this context, CPM refers to Crucible Particle Metallurgy, a powder‑metallurgy route that produces fine, uniformly distributed carbides for excellent wear resistance and reliable toughness. Note: CPM is also the well‑known California Pellet […]
CPM vs D2 vs Carburo para cuchillas de peletizadora de alta carga (2026)

La peletización a alta carga castiga los filos de corte con cargas abrasivas, impactos intermitentes y calor. No hay un ganador universal. Si el astillado del filo es el modo de fallo predominante, los aceros para herramientas CPM suelen superar a los carburos D2 convencionales y de bajo aglutinante. Si el desgaste abrasivo puro predomina bajo carga constante, el carburo cementado puede ofrecer la mayor vida útil y la mayor cantidad de reafilados. Donde el calor y […]
Cuchillas de peletizadora de carburo de tungsteno: Guía de mejores prácticas

If abrasive-filled compounds keep chewing through your blades, you’re not alone. Between 0–50% glass fiber, talc/CaCO3 fillers, high line-speed shear, and frequent start/stop cycles, edge life collapses—and pellet quality goes with it. Upgrading to tungsten carbide pelletizer knives addresses the core failure modes while stabilizing pellets and trimming unplanned downtime across strand, die-face/underwater, and ring/centrifugal […]
Evite el pegado de pellets: Mejores prácticas para cuchillas de peletizadora de tiras

Pellet linking—pellets sticking or fusing together after cutting—wastes time, increases fines, and forces unplanned downtime. In strand pelletizing, the cut must be a clean shear on a fully solidified strand. When knives are dull or mis-set, when runout is present, or when cooling/traction aren’t matched to the polymer, you’ll see smearing, tails, and linked pellets. […]