- Shandong Zhucheng Kaicheng Liangcai Machinery Factory
- support@yourdomain.tld
- +86 18053662153
Stop buying kitchen-grade equipment for a factory floor.
Last week, I inspected a sausage plant in Chonburi. They were running a “commercial” grinder they bought online. The gearbox was so hot you could fry an egg on it, and the meat coming out looked like gray mush. Why? Because the machine was fighting the meat, not cutting it.
In Southeast Asia, where we process everything from sticky sugar-cured pork (Lap Cheong) to tough dried fish, you need torque, not just speed.
If you are serious about production, you need heavy iron. We offer two specific solutions: the JR Series Meat Grinder for mincing and the Model 180 Multifunctional Cutter for precise segmenting.
For Dried Fish, Kelp, and Jerky Strips
Grinders mince; this machine segments.
If you are producing dried fish snacks (common in Thailand/Vietnam) or cutting kelp (seaweed) for soup packs, hand-cutting is too slow and inconsistent.
| Model | Voltage | Motor Power | Dimensions | Output | Speed |
| 180 | 380V | 3kW | 1800×800×1200mm | 300-500kg/h | Adjustable |
Specs that matter:
I’m going to be blunt. 90% of machine failures I see are due to laziness during cleaning.
Q: Can the JR-130 grinder handle frozen blocks?A: It can handle flaked frozen meat or fist-sized frozen chunks (-4°C). It cannot handle a solid 20kg block of ice-hard meat (-18°C). You need a Flaker for that. If you force a solid block in, you will crack the auger housing.
Q: I make spicy beef jerky. Will the chili seeds dull the cutter blade?A: Eventually, yes. But the Model 180 blades are hardened alloy steel. You will need to sharpen them maybe once a month depending on volume. It’s a 10-minute job with a whetstone.
Q: Why is your 23kW motor so big? Others use 18kW for the same capacity.A: Because we know about “Start-Up Load.” When the auger is full of cold meat and you hit the “Start” button, the motor needs a massive surge of torque to get moving. An 18kW motor might stall or burn out. Our 23kW motor powers through that initial resistance.
Q: Voltage?A: 380V / 50Hz / 3-Phase. This is the industrial standard. If you are in a rural area with voltage drops (e.g., dipping to 360V), install a stabilizer. Undervoltage kills motors faster than overuse.