XD4-35A Small Hollow Brick Making Machine
Developed and manufactured by our company, the Model 4-35 small hollow brick making machine is a fixed-type, mold-vibrating machine with mechanical demolding. Long-term use by customers has proven that it features a reasonable structure and an innovative mechanism, with the following outstanding characteristics:
Except for the main frame, all suspension and connection parts of the machine are equipped with springs. During vibration molding, the press head, mold box, mold core and supporting plate vibrate simultaneously, ensuring high density and uniformity of the products. The machine runs smoothly with low noise, excellent vibration reduction, reliable operation, long service life and easy maintenance.
The press head can move longitudinally for convenient feeding, maintenance and cleaning. Meanwhile, the descending distance of the press head is only 20mm. This small gap between the press head and the mold box/core reduces large burrs on blocks and minimizes wear to the mold box and core.
Multi-purpose and highly adaptable. With different molds, it can produce various wall blocks, paving blocks, fence blocks, curb stones and other products in different shapes and sizes. Mold replacement is easy, and customized special-shaped molds are available according to customer requirements.
The wooden bottom supporting plate resonates synchronously with the mold box and core during molding without impact force, so its service life is more than twice that of similar products.
Breaking the conventional reducer demolding design, this machine adopts pulley, chain and sprocket demolding. It features a simple structure, high durability, safety and reliability, easy maintenance, no reducer oil leakage, and low power consumption — the demolding motor is only 1.1kW.
The mold box adopts an assembled structure, and wearing parts are replaceable, which not only facilitates maintenance but also saves mold costs for users.
Requires a workshop area of about 2,000 square meters and only 2–3 workers.
















