Jaw Crusher Parts 2026 Buyer’s Guide

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Jaw Crusher Parts 2026 Buyer's Guide

Jaw Crusher Parts: 2026 Buyer’s Guide — How to Select, Inspect & Source

Unplanned downtime in a crushing circuit can cost a mining operation $50,000–$200,000 per day. In most cases, the root cause is rarely the crusher itself. It’s the wrong part. Ordered too late. From the wrong supplier.

This guide is written for maintenance managers and procurement teams who need to make fast, defensible decisions on jaw crusher wear parts — without a metallurgist on call. It covers three questions every buyer faces:

  1. What material should I specify?
  2. How do I verify the quality before and after delivery?
  3. How do I find and evaluate a reliable supplier?

Step 1: Choosing the Right Wear Parts for Your Application

Know Which Parts Drive Your Costs

Not all jaw crusher components wear at the same rate. Before you place any order, identify which parts are your highest-turnover items — these are where specification decisions have the greatest impact on your cost per tonne.

High-turnover wear parts (replace frequently, specification-critical):

  • Jaw plates (fixed and swing) — primary wear item; material grade directly determines service life
  • Cheek plates (side liners) — secondary wear; often neglected until they affect jaw plate performance
  • Toggle plates — structural wear item; also functions as a safety fuse against tramp iron

Lower-turnover components (replace less often, compatibility-critical):

  • Pitman bearings and caps
  • Tension rods and springs
  • Flywheel keys and hubs

For jaw plates and cheek plates, your material specification is the single decision that most directly controls replacement frequency and total maintenance cost.


How to Select the Right Jaw Plate Material

The table below gives you a direct selection framework based on your feed conditions. Share these parameters with any supplier before requesting a quote: rock type, feed size (F80), and typical throughput.

Material Hardness Choose This When…
Mn13Cr2 200–230 HB Soft to medium rock; high-impact feeds; recycled concrete
Mn18Cr2 210–250 HB Medium-hard rock (limestone, sandstone) with moderate impact
Mn22Cr2 220–260 HB Hard, highly abrasive ore (granite, basalt, quartzite)
TiC Composite (Mn steel + TiC inserts) 300–500 HB (matrix) High-silica ores or operations where frequent plate changes are operationally disruptive; maximizes service life
Martensitic Steel 400–550 HB Mixed abrasion/impact environments requiring a balance of toughness and hardness

Three practical rules:

  • If you’re crushing granite, basalt, or quartzite → start with Mn18Cr2 or Mn22Cr2.
  • If you process recycled concrete or demolition waste with tramp metal risk → Mn13Cr2 with correctly rated toggle plate shear bolts. Do not upgrade to a stronger toggle plate to avoid replacement — it defeats the safety function.
  • If your team spends significant time on plate change-outs due to rapid wear → ask your supplier about TiC composite options. The unit price is higher, but service life improvements often reduce total cost per tonne.
🚩 Red flag: Any supplier who quotes jaw plates without asking about your feed material is selling catalog items, not solutions. A metallurgically competent supplier will always ask before recommending a grade.

Jaw Plate Profile: Flat, Corrugated, or Curved?

Profile selection affects product gradation and throughput — not just wear life.

  • Flat profile: Maximum throughput, lowest fines generation. Best for primary crushing of hard rock.
  • Corrugated profile: Better bite on slippery or blocky feed. Slightly higher wear rate.
  • Curved profile: Improved particle shape for aggregates applications.

If you’re unsure, request a profile recommendation alongside your material quote — the two decisions are linked.


Step 2: How to Inspect and Verify Quality

Receiving the wrong alloy or an out-of-tolerance jaw plate is a risk that experienced buyers manage actively — not reactively. Here is what to request and check at each stage.

Before You Order: Documents to Request

Require the following from any supplier before placing a purchase order:

Document What It Confirms
First-article dimensional inspection report Jaw plate profile matches your crusher model (tolerance ±0.5mm or tighter)
Heat analysis certificate (mill cert) Mn%, Cr%, C% are within the specified grade — per-heat, not batch average
ISO 9001:2015 certificate The supplier operates a documented quality management system
Why the heat certificate matters: Mn content out of specification by 1–2% measurably affects work-hardening behavior. A plate with 11% Mn instead of 13% will not harden correctly under impact loading — it will wear faster, and you will not know why until you’ve run through two or three sets.

On Delivery: Physical Inspection Checklist

When parts arrive, verify before accepting:

  • Dimensions: Measure overall length, width, and mounting hole positions against the dimensional report. Use a calibrated tape and depth gauge — not visual estimation.
  • Surface condition: Check for cracks, cold shuts, or shrinkage porosity. Run a hand along the wearing surface — any irregular depressions warrant rejection.
  • Weight: Compare against the supplier’s stated weight. A jaw plate that is 5–8% underweight may indicate a thinner cross-section or lower-density alloy than specified.
  • Markings: Confirm alloy grade and heat number are marked on the part and match the certificate.
If anything fails this check: Document with photos before installation. Contact the supplier within 48 hours — most warranty claims are time-sensitive and require photographic evidence of the as-received condition.

In Service: When to Reorder (Not When to Replace)

Most procurement errors happen here: teams order jaw plates when the crusher stops, not before.

Reorder trigger: When jaw plates have consumed 50–60% of estimated service life.
Replacement trigger: When the crushing chamber has been reduced to 75–80% of original depth, or throughput drops and product gradation widens.

Jaw plates in continuous hard-rock crushing typically last 250–400 operating hours under standard conditions — actual wear life varies significantly with feed hardness, crusher settings, and alloy selection. Set a calendar reminder or tonnage counter at the midpoint of your expected wear life, and have the next set on-site before you hit the replacement trigger.


Step 3: How to Find and Evaluate a Reliable Supplier

OEM vs. Aftermarket: What the 2026 Market Looks Like

The aftermarket for jaw crusher wear parts has matured. Quality-certified aftermarket suppliers now routinely match OEM dimensional specifications — at significantly lower cost for standard wear parts like jaw plates and cheek plates.

Aspect OEM Parts Quality Aftermarket
Dimensional Accuracy Reference standard ±0.3–0.5mm (ISO-certified suppliers)
Metallurgy Fixed catalog specification Application-specific alloy selection available
Pricing 100% (baseline) 40–60% of OEM pricing for standard wear parts; savings vary by part type and supplier
Lead Time 6–16 weeks (imported) 4–8 weeks (direct from foundry)
Quality Certification OEM QC system ISO 9001:2015 + per-heat chemistry verification
Technical Support Parts catalog Metallurgical consultation available
Legacy Model Coverage Discontinued models: limited Broader coverage including discontinued equipment
The rule that applies to both: Always request dimensional inspection reports and material certificates. Source matters less than documentation.

Five Questions to Qualify Any Supplier

Use these questions when evaluating a new jaw crusher parts supplier. The answers will tell you more than any brochure.

1. “What alloy do you recommend for my application — and why?”
A supplier who answers without asking about your feed material, feed size, and crusher model is reciting a catalog. A qualified supplier will ask first, then recommend.

2. “Can you provide a per-heat chemistry certificate for the last batch of Mn18 jaw plates you shipped?”
This tests whether they actually do per-heat verification or just claim to. If they can produce it within 24 hours, they have the system. If they hesitate or send a generic spec sheet, they don’t.

3. “What is your on-time delivery rate, and what is your current lead time for [your specific crusher model]?”
You want a specific number, not “we have good stock.” A supplier who tracks on-time delivery is a supplier who takes it seriously.

4. “Do you carry stock for [your crusher model], or is everything made to order?”
For emergency replacements, stock availability is the only metric that matters. Know this before you need it.

5. “What does your warranty cover, and what is the claims process?”
A warranty that covers “manufacturing defects” with no defined timeline or resolution process is not a warranty. You want: dimensional compliance, chemistry compliance, and a named contact for claims.


Supplier Red Flags to Watch For

  • No per-heat certificates — only generic material spec sheets
  • Cannot confirm your exact crusher model — only confirms the OEM brand
  • Lead time longer than your maintenance interval — a structural supply risk
  • Price significantly below market — jaw plates are a commodity with known material costs; prices 30%+ below market often indicate alloy substitution
  • No technical contact available — only a sales team; no engineering or metallurgical support

Quick Reference

Parameter Guideline
Jaw plate replacement trigger 75–80% chamber depth consumed
Typical wear life (hard rock) 250–400 hours (varies with feed hardness & alloy)
Reorder lead time buffer Minimum 4 weeks before replacement trigger
Aftermarket cost vs OEM 40–60% of OEM for standard wear parts
Minimum documents required Dimensional report + heat cert + ISO certificate

Frequently Asked Questions

Which OEM brands does aftermarket coverage include?
Quality aftermarket suppliers cover all major brands including Metso Nordberg (C series), Sandvik (CJ/JM series), Terex/Pegson, Kue-Ken, Brown Lenox, and others. Can’t find your model? Share the crusher nameplate details — our catalog covers 200+ crusher models including discontinued and legacy equipment.

Can I mix OEM and aftermarket wear parts in the same crusher?
Yes — provided dimensional specifications are met, parts from different suppliers can be used simultaneously. This is common practice and creates no technical issue.

How should jaw plates be stored before installation?
Store horizontally on wooden pallets in a dry environment. Do not stack directly on bare ground. Heavy manganese plates should not be stored vertically — risk of warping under self-weight over extended periods.

What information do I need to provide to get an accurate quote?
At minimum: crusher make and model, jaw plate profile (if known), rock type, F80 feed size, and annual consumption volume. If you have the part number from your current supplier, include that too.


Ready to Source Jaw Crusher Parts?

Share your crusher model, current wear part specification, feed material type, and annual consumption volume.
Our metallurgical team responds within 24 hours with a material recommendation, lead time, and FOB/CIF quotation.

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