Selecting the right wear material for crusher liners, mantles, blow bars, and jaw plates is one of the most consequential decisions in crushing plant maintenance management. The wrong specification can halve wear part service life, increase crusher downtime, and raise cost-per-tonne to uncompetitive levels.
This guide covers the primary material options for the three main crusher types — jaw crushers, cone crushers, and impact crushers — and the operating conditions that determine the best choice for each application.
Unlike many engineering material selections, crusher wear parts involve an inherent trade-off:
The optimal material sits at the right point on this hardness-toughness spectrum for your specific feed material, feed size, and crushing method. Getting this balance wrong in either direction increases cost — either through accelerated wear or through premature fracture.
Jaw crushers apply compressive force through a fixed and a movable jaw plate. The primary wear mechanism is abrasion combined with compression — feed material is squeezed and dragged across the jaw plate surface.
High manganese steel (Hadfield steel) remains the dominant material for jaw crusher liners globally. Its unique property is work hardening — the surface hardens dramatically under impact and compressive stress, while the bulk material remains tough and ductile.
Best for: Hard, abrasive feed (granite, basalt, iron ore) with large feed sizes (>200 mm). The work-hardening effect is maximised when feed particles are large enough to generate significant impact forces.
Limitation: In fine crushing or with soft feed materials, insufficient impact energy prevents full work hardening and the liner wears faster than expected.
Higher manganese content increases toughness further at some cost to initial hardness. Used in applications with high impact loads — large feed, intermittent boulder loading, or hard blocky feed.
Best for: Primary jaw crushing of hard rock with irregular, high-impact feed.
For fine jaw crushing applications where work hardening is limited, medium alloy steel with chromium and molybdenum additions offers higher initial hardness than manganese steel.
Best for: Secondary jaw crushing, fine feed sizes, soft to medium-hard feed material.
Cone crushers (mantles and concaves/bowl liners) operate through a combination of compression and sliding action. The wear environment is generally less impactful than a jaw crusher but involves more continuous sliding abrasion.
The addition of chromium to high manganese steel improves abrasion resistance while maintaining good toughness. This is the most widely used specification for cone crusher mantles and bowl liners in hard rock applications.
Best for: Hard, abrasive feed (granite, quartzite, iron ore) in secondary and tertiary cone crushing.
Higher manganese content for applications with very high impact loading or significant uncrushable material risk (tramp metal).
Best for: Large primary cone crushers, applications with tramp metal risk.
Where abrasion is the dominant wear mechanism and impact loads are low, high chrome iron offers significantly higher hardness (650–750 HB). Service life can be 2–3× longer than manganese steel in the right conditions.
Best for: Fine cone crushing, abrasive but low-impact feed (river gravel, limestone, soft sandstone).
Critical limitation: High chrome iron is brittle. Any application with significant impact loading — oversized feed, uncrushable material, or feed segregation — risks catastrophic fracture. This material should never be specified without a careful assessment of impact risk.
Impact crushers (blow bars, impact plates, apron liners) operate through high-velocity impact rather than compression. Blow bars rotate at high tip speeds (30–50 m/s) and fracture feed material through kinetic energy transfer — a fundamentally different wear environment dominated by high-energy impact rather than abrasion.
The toughest option. High manganese steel blow bars will survive almost any impact event without fracturing, but wear relatively quickly in abrasive applications.
Best for: Recycling applications (concrete demolition waste, mixed construction debris) where tramp metal risk is constant and fracture resistance is the priority.
Higher initial hardness than manganese steel with reasonable toughness. Delivers consistent performance from new to end-of-life without relying on work hardening.
Best for: Natural aggregate applications with medium-hard feed (limestone, soft granite) where feed is controlled and tramp metal risk is low. Typically 30–50% longer wear life than manganese steel in these conditions.
Highest wear resistance available for impact crusher blow bars. In clean, controlled limestone crushing, high chrome iron can deliver 3–4× the service life of manganese steel blow bars.
Best for: Clean limestone and soft aggregate crushing with very low tramp metal risk. Strictly controlled feed preparation is essential.
The premium category. Ceramic composite blow bars embed hard ceramic tiles (typically aluminium oxide or zirconia) in a steel or high chrome iron matrix, combining extreme hardness (>1,200 HV ceramic phase) with a tough backing material.
Best for: Highly abrasive applications — flint-bearing limestone, recycled glass, abrasive sand and gravel. Cost is significantly higher, but service life in the right application justifies the premium.
| Feed Material | Crusher Type | Recommended Material |
|---|---|---|
| Hard granite / basalt (primary) | Jaw | Mn14 or Mn18 |
| Hard granite / basalt (secondary/tertiary) | Cone | Mn18Cr2 |
| Limestone (abrasive, low impact) | Cone | High Chrome Iron |
| River gravel / soft aggregate | Impact | Martensitic Steel |
| Recycling / demolition waste | Impact | High Manganese Steel |
| Clean limestone (controlled feed) | Impact | High Chrome Iron |
| Flint-bearing or highly abrasive | Impact | Ceramic Composite |
No single material is optimal across all crusher types and feed conditions. The facilities that achieve the lowest cost-per-tonne consistently are those that match material specification precisely to their operating conditions — and review that specification when feed conditions change.
SMI supplies crusher wear parts in all grades discussed in this guide, manufactured to OEM and custom specifications. Our technical team can review your feed material, crusher model, and current wear data to recommend the most cost-effective specification.
Contact us for a technical consultation, or visit minecomponents.com for full product listings and technical datasheets.
High-Performance Aluminum Ingot Molds: The Complete Selection Guide Material, Design, and Capacity Decisions for Primary… Read More
Why Do Aluminium Ingot Molds Fail — and How to Make Them Last Longer Ingot… Read More
Scalable Manufacturing Solutions for Heavy Industrial Components Reliability in High-Volume Component Supply At SinoMachine, we… Read More
Cryogenic Check Valve Selection: Threaded vs Flanged Design Selecting the right cryogenic check valve is… Read More
[gallery type="rectangular" columns="2" size="medium" ids="3418,3419"] Stainless Steel SS304 SS316 Investment Casting Wing Nut with Machining… Read More
We (SMI) specialize in OEM precision castings (0.1kg to 200kg per piece), CNC machining parts,… Read More