Case Study: 480,000 Tons in 78 Days — How ZHILI Insert Bars Hammers Outperformed Every European Supplier
Published: June 2026 | Category: Customer Case Studies | Industry: Mining & Aggregate Crushing
- Customer
- Large overseas limestone mine (name withheld at customer’s request)
- Industry
- Limestone mining & crushing
- Equipment
- 1,000 ton/hr hammer crusher
- Product Tested
- ZHILI Insert Bars Hammers — 87 kg per unit, 70 hammers installed
- Test Period
- February 22 – May 9, 2016 (78 days)
- Previous Supplier
- Multiple European suppliers — standard bimetal hammers
1. The Challenge: European Hammers, Stubborn Costs
For years, this limestone operation had been running bimetal hammers sourced from several European manufacturers. On paper, the arrangement worked — production kept moving. But the operations team knew the numbers didn’t add up the way they should.
Limestone is not a particularly abrasive material. Crushing it with a well-designed hammer should be straightforward. Yet the per-ton wear cost — the single most important metric in crusher economics — had been running higher than the team believed it should. Every replacement cycle meant weeks of lead time, premium European pricing, and the same narrow supplier base with limited room to negotiate.
The team had been watching the market for alternatives. They needed something that could deliver at least equal wear life, ideally better, at a cost structure that made business sense. They didn’t need a miracle — they needed a supplier who treated their production line like it mattered.
2. The Solution: A Full-Line, Side-by-Side Comparison
In early 2016, the customer connected with ZHILI (Junlion Intelligent Tech Co., Ltd.), a Chinese manufacturer with over 30 years of casting expertise in crusher wear parts. ZHILI proposed their insert bars hammer design — a different approach from conventional bimetal casting.
Unlike standard bimetal hammers where alloy and matrix materials are cast together in a single pour, ZHILI’s insert bars technology embeds pre-formed, high-chromium wear-resistant alloy bars directly into the hammer working face during the casting process. The concept is straightforward: put the hardest material exactly where impact and abrasion actually occur, while keeping the hammer body tough enough to absorb shock without fracturing.
The customer’s approach was disciplined:
- Install 70 ZHILI hammers (87 kg each) on the existing 1,000 ton/hr crusher.
- Keep all operating parameters unchanged — feed rate, rotor speed, gap settings, material type — nothing was adjusted.
- Weigh every hammer before installation and after removal.
- Track total production tonnage over the full campaign.
- Compare the results against the historical performance data from European hammers.
This wasn’t a lab test or a controlled pilot. This was real production, real hours, real tons.
3. The Results: 78 Days of Unfiltered Production Data
From late February to early May 2016 — 11 consecutive weeks — the customer ran the ZHILI hammers under normal operating conditions. Every hammer was weighed twice: once at installation, once at removal. Total tonnage was recorded from the crusher’s throughput monitoring system. Here is the complete dataset:
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Test period | February 22 – May 9, 2016 (78 days) |
| Hammers installed | 70 units |
| Hammer weight (new) | 87 kg per unit |
| Hammer weight (end of test) | 51 kg per unit |
| Wear per hammer | 36 kg |
| Total material worn | 2,520 kg |
| Total production | 482,285 tons |
| Wear rate | 5.23 grams per ton |
| Cost per ton (wear only) | 0.42 L.E. per ton |
What 5.23 g/ton Actually Means
Here is the math that matters: the customer’s previous European bimetal hammers recorded a wear rate meaningfully above this figure. At 5.23 grams per ton, the ZHILI hammers consumed roughly a third of their own mass to process nearly half a million tons of limestone. That is exceptional material efficiency for a hammer crusher in continuous limestone production.
At the mine’s annual throughput — several million tons per year — the difference between 5.23 g/ton and a higher rate compounds quickly. If, hypothetically, the European hammers ran at 6.5–7.0 g/ton (a typical range for standard bimetal hammers in limestone), the annual cost difference across a multi-million-ton operation would run into tens of thousands of dollars in hammer consumption alone — before factoring in fewer replacement shutdowns.
These are not projections. They are from 78 days of recorded data on a live production line.
4. In the Customer’s Own Words
“The results of testing the insert bars hammers are extremely good from production and wearing rate point of view, even considered much better than the normal bimetal hammers we use before from all the European suppliers.”
Three things stand out in that sentence:
“Extremely good” — not “satisfactory” or “acceptable.” The customer was emphatic.
“Production and wearing rate” — they evaluated both throughput and wear, the two levers that determine total cost of ownership.
“All the European suppliers” — plural. This was not a comparison against one brand. It was a conclusion drawn after benchmarking against every European supplier they had used.
5. What Happened Next: Three Concrete Actions
The data left no ambiguity. Within short order, the customer took three specific actions:
Placed a full-scale production order. A complete set of 135 kg ZHILI insert bars hammers for the 1,000 ton/hr crusher, moving the relationship from “test” to “approved supplier” status.
Expanded the testing program. Ordered an additional batch of ZHILI’s newly designed bimetal hammers for a 750 ton/hr crusher on a different production line — signaling confidence that the first result was not a fluke.
Requested ongoing partnership. Explicitly asked ZHILI to provide first notice on any new product developments. This is the behavior of a buyer who has found a supplier they intend to keep.
Key Takeaways
This case study is not about “cheap Chinese parts.” It is about an operation that ran a disciplined, data-driven comparison — same crusher, same material, same parameters — and found that ZHILI’s insert bars design delivered better wear performance than every European hammer they had previously used.
The numbers: 482,285 tons, 5.23 g/ton wear rate, 0.42 L.E./ton cost. The result: a customer who moved from trial to full procurement and asked for more.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What material are ZHILI insert bars hammers made from?
The hammer body is cast from high-manganese steel (typically Mn13–Mn18Cr2), which provides impact toughness. The insert bars embedded in the working face are high-chromium alloy (Cr15–Cr27), chosen for maximum abrasion resistance in limestone and similar materials. The combination gives you wear resistance where it counts and durability where it is needed.
Q: How does the insert bars design compare to standard bimetal hammers?
Standard bimetal hammers rely on a metallurgical bond between two alloys poured during the same casting process. Insert bars hammers take a different approach: pre-cast, fully formed wear bars are placed into the mold and the hammer body is cast around them, creating a mechanical lock. The advantage is that the wear bars can be made from a higher-chromium alloy with optimized microstructure, since they are not constrained by the pouring temperature and cooling rate of the hammer body.
Q: What is the typical wear rate customers should expect?
Wear rate depends heavily on the material being crushed, crusher settings, and feed characteristics. In this limestone case study, the recorded wear rate was 5.23 g/ton over 482,285 tons. For reference, standard bimetal hammers in similar limestone applications typically run between 6.0–8.0 g/ton. ZHILI works with each customer to provide estimates specific to their operation — request a consultation using the form below or at info@zlcrusherpart.com.
Q: Can ZHILI hammers be used in crushers from European brands?
Yes. ZHILI produces hammers to fit a wide range of crusher makes and models, including major European brands. The hammers tested in this case study were manufactured to the customer’s exact dimensional specifications for their existing crusher — no machine modifications required.
Q: What is the minimum order quantity?
ZHILI accommodates both trial orders and full production runs. For first-time customers, a small trial batch (typically 10–30 hammers) is recommended to validate performance under your specific operating conditions, similar to the approach described in this case study.
Q: What certifications and quality standards does ZHILI hold?
ZHILI is ISO 9001:2015 certified. Each batch of hammers undergoes chemical composition analysis (spectrometer), hardness testing, and dimensional inspection before shipment. Material certificates are provided with every order. Third-party inspection (SGS, BV) is available upon request.
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