Extrusion Equipment Parts Gallery: Custom Screws, Dies & Mixer Blades

Our extrusion parts gallery showcases examples of custom-machined components for food processing, polymer, and chemical processing equipment manufacturers. These photographs represent 40 years of combined expertise in exotic metals machining—from Hastelloy and Inconel high-temperature screws to precision-ground 316SS extrusion dies with mirror finishes. Each project demonstrates the capability to manufacture complex profiles, maintain tight tolerances, and deliver superior surface quality that distinguishes precision work from commodity production.

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Extruder Screws & Feeder Screws

Extruder screws require precise geometry, material selection matching application demands, and consistent quality across every thread and flight. Our screw manufacturing includes twin screws for co-extrusion, feeder screws for initial material intake, and specialty screws for compounding and pelletizing applications.

The examples below show our approach to custom extruder screw manufacturing—material-appropriate speeds and feeds, careful attention to thread geometry, and surface finishes that maintain performance in demanding polymers and food processing environments.

Key Specifications Shown:

  • Diameters from 3″ to 14″
  • Flight lengths up to 60″
  • Materials: Hastelloy C-276 for corrosive polymers, Inconel 625 for high-temperature compounding, 316L for food-grade applications
  • Tolerances: ±0.0005″ standard, ±0.0001″ achievable on critical dimensions with EDM
  • Finish quality: Precision ground surfaces, consistent geometry across all flights

Twin Screw Assembly

Inconel 625 – 8″ diameter x 48″ flight length – High-temperature polymer compounding

Feeder Screw

316L Stainless Steel – 5″ diameter – Food processing material intake with mirror finish

Custom Flight Profile

Hastelloy C-276 – 10″ diameter – Corrosive polymer extrusion with specialized compression ratio

Extrusion Dies

Extrusion dies demand the highest precision and surface quality. Rough finishes cause material hang-up, inconsistent melt flow, and quality defects downstream. Our complex extrusion die profiles showcase our 5-axis CNC capability for creating curved cavities, intricate flow channels, and custom geometries that larger shops struggle to manufacture.

Dies we produce include flex-lip dies (adjustable opening), ribbon dies for flat film, rod/tubing dies for profile extrusion, and sheet dies for film manufacture. Each die is engineered for proper melt distribution, thermal stability, and ease of cleaning.

Key Specifications Shown:

  • Sizes up to 12″ wide
  • Materials: 316SS with FDA-compliant finishes for food, Hastelloy for corrosive additives, tool steel for abrasive polymers
  • Tolerances: ±0.0001″ achievable on cavity dimensions using EDM finishing
  • Surface finish: Mirror finishes (Ra 4-8 micro-inches) preventing material buildup
  • 5-axis complexity: Curved flow channels, depth-variable clearances, thermal management features

Sheet Die for Film Extrusion

316 Stainless Steel – 8″ width – Food packaging film with precision mirror finish

Flex-Lip Die Assembly

Tool Steel – 10″ width – Adjustable opening for profile adjustment with tight cavity tolerance

Rod Die

Hastelloy C-276 – 6″ diameter – Corrosive polymer extrusion with complex internal flow paths

Film Die Cross-Section

316SS – Custom geometry – Showing internal cavity detail and thermal management features

Mixer Bowls & Blades

Mixing equipment components require durable materials, precise profiles for optimal shear/mixing action, and surface finishes that prevent material buildup. Banbury bowls, sigma blade assemblies, cam mixers, and custom impellers each have unique geometry requirements.

Our precision mixer blade machining covers Banbury bowls for elastomer mixing, sigma blades for high-viscosity polymers, cam mixers for specialized blending, and custom impeller designs for chemical processing. Exotic metals like Hastelloy and Inconel extend equipment life in aggressive chemical environments.

Key Specifications Shown:

  • Materials: 316SS for food & chemical, Hastelloy for corrosive chemicals, Inconel for high-temp service
  • Sizes: Bowls up to 16″ diameter, blades up to 14″ width
  • Tolerances: ±0.0005″ on blade profiles ensuring consistent mixing action
  • Surface finish: Smooth machined surfaces preventing polymer hang-up
  • Custom profiles: 5-axis machining for optimal blade geometry and shear characteristics

Banbury Bowl Set

316L Stainless Steel – 14″ diameter – Food-safe elastomer mixing with precision lip geometry

Sigma Blade Assembly

Inconel 625 – 12″ width – High-viscosity polymer mixing at elevated temperature

Custom Impeller

Hastelloy C-276 – Chemical processing mixer – Complex curved blade design for aggressive acids

Why These Examples Matter

These extrusion equipment part examples represent what precision CNC machining in exotic metals actually looks like. They show the difference between shops that simply claim “exotic metals capability” and shops with 40 years of hands-on experience understanding how Hastelloy work-hardens, how Inconel thermal expands during cutting, and how 316 requires specific feed rates to maintain mirror finishes.
Each part in this gallery was manufactured with the understanding that it performs in demanding industrial conditions—food processing sanitation requirements, polymer extrusion high temperatures, chemical corrosion resistance. The tolerances aren’t arbitrary; they’re determined by functional requirements. The surface finishes aren’t cosmetic; they’re critical to equipment performance and longevity.
For design engineers evaluating precision capabilities, this gallery demonstrates that GQ understands complex screw profiles, precision die cavity geometry, and the material behavior that makes these parts work. For operations managers managing procurement timelines, it shows consistent quality and the capability to replicate performance. For production managers keeping equipment running, it represents reliable parts that won’t require emergency sourcing or workarounds.

Manufacturing Process Behind the Parts

The quality visible in these examples comes from systematic process control: material verification, tool selection matched to alloy properties, speed/feed optimization for toughness materials, and multi-step finishing operations.

Our process for exotic metals extrusion components includes:

  • Material preparation: Verifying material certifications and hardness before machining
  • Rough machining: Conservative feeds/speeds on Hastelloy and Inconel to manage tool wear and thermal expansion
  • Intermediate operations: 5-axis contouring for complex profiles, then roughing to near-final dimensions
  • Finishing operations: Precision grinding or EDM for critical dimensions, surface grinding for finish quality on dies
  • Quality verification: Dimensional measurement on critical features, visual inspection for finish consistency
  • Documentation: Providing certification records for food-grade 316L or specialized applications

From Gallery to Production

Viewing these extrusion equipment examples is the first step. The second step is discussing your specific part requirements—whether you need replacement screws for existing equipment, custom dies for a new profile, or mixer blades for specialized applications.

We welcome engineering drawings, CAD files, or existing parts for reverse engineering. For early-stage design, we can provide input on manufacturability, material selection, tolerance optimization, and timeline estimates.

To discuss your extrusion equipment manufacturing needs, explore our full manufacturing services or contact us directly with your specifications.

Request a Quote for Similar Projects

Your precision extrusion equipment components start with clear specifications and experienced manufacturing. Provide your engineering drawings, material requirements, and target tolerances—along with expected quantities and delivery timeline.
We respond to all inquiries within 24 business hours with preliminary capability assessment and estimated timeline.
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