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Used Tablet Presses in Shanghai, China

Overview

Tablet presses compress powder into tablets for pharmaceutical, nutraceutical, or supplement production. They range from single-station and eccentric presses to high-speed rotary machines, offering different output rates, tooling styles, and control systems. Buyers choose by required throughput, tablet size and shape, tooling compatibility, and compliance needs such as cGMP or containment for potent APIs.

FAQ

What key specs should I check when buying a used tablet press?

Check production rate (tph or tablets/min), turret type (rotary vs. single-station), max compression force, tooling standard and sizes, punch/die condition, feeder type, PLC/control system, and compliance options (vacuum, deduster, containment). Verify electrical voltage and safety features.

How do I inspect a tablet press before purchase?

Run a site acceptance or witness test with product or standard granulation. Check punch/die wear, turret alignment, gearbox and bearings, feeders and cams, seals, electrical cabinets, and lubrication. Request maintenance records, spare parts list, and calibration certificates.

Are tooling and dies usually included and interchangeable?

Often some tooling is included but not always complete. Confirm punch/die standards (e.g., B, D, custom), their condition, and whether spares are available. Interchangeability depends on press model and tooling shank; verify fit and tooling changeover time.

What should I know about shipping and crating a tablet press?

Tablet presses are heavy and sensitive—crate to protect controls and tooling, secure moving parts, and remove/pack punches and dies separately. Use certified rigging, note lift points, consider partial disassembly, and ensure customs paperwork, export controls, and insurance for high-value pharma equipment.

What regular maintenance keeps a tablet press reliable?

Daily cleaning, inspection of punches/dies, lubrication of cams and bearings, feeder and motor checks, and monitoring compression force. Scheduled checks include gearbox oil, bearing play, PLC backups, and preventive replacement of high-wear tooling. Follow manufacturer maintenance intervals.

What documentation and support should I request?

Ask for operation manuals, PLC software versions, wiring diagrams, spare parts lists, maintenance logs, calibration certificates, and any IQ/OQ/PQ or validation packs. Check availability of OEM spare parts, service contracts, and field service for commissioning and training.

Are there compliance or electrical issues to confirm?

Confirm power requirements, grounding, and control language. Check CE, cGMP, ATEX or containment ratings if handling dust or potent APIs. Ensure the machine can meet cleanability and validation standards required by your regulatory environment.