Choosing Screen Media for FL - Davis Industrial & ConnWeld
Wire, Urethane, or Rubber? How to Choose the Right Screen Media for Florida and Southeast Operations
Screen media doesn't get much attention until it fails. But the type of media running on a deck affects everything downstream of it — throughput, product sizing, wear life, noise levels, and ultimately, cost per ton. With profile wire, polyurethane, rubber, hybrid, and perforated plate all available for most applications, the real question isn't which media is “best.” It's which one is right for a specific operation.
As an authorized Conn-Weld distributor and application partner, Davis Industrial helps Florida and Southeast operations work through exactly that question. Here's a practical breakdown of the major screen media types and where each one fits.
The Main Types of Screen Media
- Profile wire (Tuff-Screens®) — high open area with a self-relieving wire shape that resists blinding and pegging. Best for high-efficiency sizing where maximizing throughput matters most.
- Polyurethane — long wear life, significant noise reduction, and a modular system of dams, deflectors, and restrictive-flow panels that lets each section of the deck be engineered for a specific role. Best for high-wear, high-moisture, or noise-sensitive applications.
- Rubber and hybrid — the highest impact resistance of the group, with strong noise dampening. Best for scalping and high-wear zones near the feed end, where raw impact — not fine sizing — is the main challenge.
- Perforated plate (Tuff-Plate) — CNC-manufactured for precise, consistent openings in slotted, square, round, or angled shapes, available in AR400 or stainless steel. Best where exact product sizing and durability matter more than maximum open area.
- Woven wire — available in carbon steel, stainless, or other alloys, and compatible with most panel and hold-down systems. Often the standard, cost-effective choice for general-duty screening.
- Scalping (removing oversize before crushing) — needs impact resistance more than fine open area. Rubber, hybrid, or heavier-duty profile wire typically hold up best here.
- Wet sizing — water changes everything. Finer cuts see a much bigger capacity boost from added water than coarse cuts do, so media and water management have to be selected together rather than separately. Urethane's engineered flow control is built for exactly this kind of application.
- High-wear, abrasive material — durability outweighs efficiency. Heavier-duty urethane or rubber is usually the right call, even at some cost to open area.
- Fine, precise sizing — profile wire or perforated plate, where consistent, tight-tolerance openings matter more than raw durability.
Media at a Glance
Every media type trades off durability, efficiency, and noise differently. Here's a general comparison — actual performance still depends on the specific application, material, and moisture conditions:
|
Media Type |
Best For |
Relative Wear Life |
Noise Level |
|
Woven Wire |
General-duty, cost-sensitive screening |
Lower |
Higher |
|
Perforated Plate (Tuff-Plate) |
Precise sizing, high-wear zones |
Medium |
Medium |
|
Rubber & Hybrid |
Scalping, high-impact zones |
Medium-High |
Low |
|
Polyurethane |
Wet, high-moisture, noise-sensitive applications |
Highest |
Lowest |
|
Profile Wire (Tuff-Screens®) |
High-efficiency sizing, anti-blinding |
Application-dependent |
Higher |
Synthetic media like polyurethane and rubber can meaningfully cut noise on a plant floor — in some cases reducing a 110 dB reading down to around 96 dB, which is a noticeable difference for hearing protection requirements and overall plant conditions.
Matching Media to the Application
Why the Right Fit Beats the Lowest Price
Media that's cheaper up front but wears out in half the time — or media with the wrong open area that blinds constantly — almost always costs more per ton once downtime and labor are factored in. The goal isn't to buy the media with the longest lifespan or the lowest price tag. It's to balance durability with efficiency for the specific material, moisture, and throughput target on that deck.
Full Access, One Local Partner
Because Conn-Weld manufactures its own wire in-house and produces its full media lineup directly, Davis Industrial can move between media types for a customer without switching suppliers or waiting through long lead times — which matters when a deck is down and losing tons every hour.
Whether the application calls for the anti-blinding relief of profile wire, the wear life and quiet operation of polyurethane, the impact resistance of rubber, or the sizing precision of perforated plate, the right choice comes down to matching media to the material — not defaulting to whatever happens to already be on the deck.
From Media to Machines — We've Got You Covered.
To get a media recommendation for your specific application, visit www.conveyors247.com or contact our team today.