With 100 years of experience, GEA has developed a unique expertise in designing, manufacturing and servicing the widest available range of industrial rotary presses.
While the pharmaceutical industry is the largest customer for our tablet machines, we have developed a range of high-speed industrial rotary presses especially for a variety of applications, such as powder metallurgy, ceramics, nuclear fuels, catalysts, ferrites, electronics, consumables, automotive, detergents, hygiene and body care, nutraceuticals and food.
To get in touch with our team of experts for these applications, click here.
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For non-pharma applications, the PERFORMA P tablet press has been upgraded for high wear resistance to cope with abrasive powders.
The R233 is designed for single-layer / double-output or double-layer / single-output 24/7 tablet production with minimum maintenance to produce large volumes of tablets (such as salt tablets, catalysts, coffee pods, etc.), suitable for the processing of abrasive and corrosive powders.
The R253 is designed for for single-layer/double-output or double-layer/single-output 24/7 tablet production with minimum maintenance to produce large volumes of tablets (such as detergents, catalysts, automotive parts, batteries, etc.). This machine can be used to produce tablets with one or multiple vertical holes.
The R55 is a robust, exceptionally versatile industrial rotary press for single-layer tablet and component production. From nuclear fuel pellets, hard metals and batteries to confectionery.
Resource-efficient fashion has been a long-sought ambition amid the fashion industry’s considerable contributions to global carbon emissions. The need to close the loop by recycling textile fibers into virgin-like materials is higher than ever but seemed like a distant dream until now: Circ, GEA’s American customer and pioneer in the field of textile recycling, might be rewriting the future of the fashion industry.
Alternative proteins are promising – yet still expensive to produce. The usual response is that scaling up will solve this issue. But what if the solution was really about getting better, not just bigger? From more efficient, high-yield processes to upcycling waste heat, engineers are reshaping how we grow food.
As anti-cancer drugs become more powerful and complex, GEA is redefining how to safely freeze-dry these life-saving treatments.