The CPI-1412 primary impact crusher is a first-stage machine for medium-hardness materials. This section covers the feed it accepts, the products it generates, its industries, wear-part management and how it compares with a jaw crusher.
What Materials Can the CPI-1412 Process?
The CPI-1412 is designed for medium-hardness, low-abrasion feed, most commonly:
- Limestone
- Dolomite
- Other soft to medium-hard sedimentary rock
It is not intended for hard, abrasive rock such as granite or basalt, which would cause rapid wear of the blow bars and breaker plates. Feed must be within the 900 x 900 mm maximum size to enter the chamber; the large inlet allows substantial run-of-quarry limestone blocks to be charged directly.
What Products Does It Produce?
The CPI-1412 produces a cubical, well-shaped primary product. The high reduction ratio of impact crushing means the output is often fine enough to reduce or remove the need for a separate secondary stage on softer limestone. The product is screened into concrete and asphalt aggregate fractions and base course material. Cubical particle shape is a specific advantage for concrete and asphalt mixes, where flaky or elongated particles weaken the mix and increase binder demand.
Which Industries Use This Crusher?
- Limestone and dolomite quarries
- Concrete and asphalt aggregate producers needing cubical shape
- Cement raw-material preparation
- Road base and construction aggregate supply
At approximately 23,000 kg with a 250 kW drive, the CPI-1412 is the compact entry point into impact crushing for small and medium limestone operations.
How Are Wear Parts Managed?
The main wear parts are the manganese steel blow (impeller) bars on the rotor, the breaker plates and the chamber liners. Blow bars wear fastest and are replaced or rotated as they round off; the breaker bar setting is adjusted to compensate for wear before replacement. Because wear is directly tied to feed abrasiveness, keeping the crusher on low-abrasion limestone-type feed is the key to acceptable wear-part cost. Verifying the iron content of the feed is also important, as tramp metal can damage the high-speed rotor and bars.
What Should Be Considered During Operation?
Consistent feed and a protected inlet (chain curtain) keep the impact process efficient and the rotor balanced. The breaker bar gaps should be checked and re-set as wear progresses to hold product size. The unobstructed discharge must be kept clear to prevent packing, and bearing lubrication maintained for continuous duty. Rotor balance should be confirmed after each blow-bar change, since an unbalanced rotor at operating speed causes vibration and shortens bearing life.
Impact Crusher Versus Jaw Crusher
A primary impact crusher such as the CPI-1412 reduces by impact, gives a cubical product and a high reduction ratio, and is best for medium-hardness, low-abrasion limestone and dolomite. A jaw crusher reduces by compression and is the better primary choice for hard, abrasive rock such as granite and basalt, where an impact crusher would wear quickly. The choice is driven mainly by feed hardness and abrasiveness: where the feed is limestone and a cubical product is required, the impact crusher is the more efficient option; where the feed is hard or abrasive, the jaw crusher gives lower wear cost.



