What is the Difference Between a Sieve and a Screen


Even in the business of manufacturing and supplying vibratory sieving and screening equipment, the terms ‘sieve’ and ‘screen’ are pretty interchangeable, but technically speaking, there is a difference.
 
Why the Confusion?
Both are very similar (which is why they are often thrown in together).
 
They generally consist of a wire mesh with some sort of vibration applied.
 
The mesh is included to separate a product into two different groups based on particle size. One separation of the product is generally considered the ‘good’ product, and the other discarded or reprocessed. It is a simple process used for countless applications in dozens of sectors.
 
So, what is the difference between a sieve and a screen?
What is a sieve?
A sieve is used to process individual batches of product.
 
At YUBO, we sell a lot of sieves to baking companies who use them to sift and check screen bags of flour and other ingredients before they are mixed during production. The sieving process sifts out lumps and improves the quality of the flour for a better final product, as well as adding a measure of safety by separating out any debris that may have found its way into the product.
 
What is a screen?
A screen is used on a continuous flow of product.
 
Screens are installed into production streams to remove lumps and oversize particles, or allow fine particles and dust to be separated out, with the aim of cleaning up the final product.
 
We have supplied screen systems to chemical manufacturers to screen off lumps before the final bagging process, and to crisp manufacturers to remove small broken crisps and crumbs before packing.
 
Screens come in both circular and linear configurations. Deciding which is best for a particular process is usually determined by the type of product being processed, the throughput required, and space limitation within a facility.
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