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A peanut sheller typically consists of a feeding hopper, shelling chamber, rotating drum or rollers, concave screen, fan, and outlet chutes.
Working Principle:
Peanuts are fed through the hopper into the shelling chamber. The machine uses friction, pressure, or impact between a rotating drum/roller and a fixed concave screen to crack the shells. The broken shells and kernels then pass through sieves and an air blower (fan). The fan blows away the lighter shells, while the heavier kernels fall through the outlet chute.
Capacity: Ranges from small manual machines (20–50 kg/hour) to large industrial shellers (500–1,000+ kg/hour).
Power Source: Can be powered manually (hand-crank), by an electric motor, or by a small petrol/diesel engine.
Key Features
High efficiency – saves time and reduces labor cost.