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The image illustrates the brick manufacturing process in a sequential diagram form, featuring various equipment and steps involved. It starts with the extraction of clay using a digger, followed by clay processing through a roller. The processed clay is then mixed with sand and water, and passed through a metal grid to achieve a consistent blend. This mixture can be shaped into bricks using either a wire cutter or a mould, resulting in the formation of wire cut bricks or moulded bricks respectively. Subsequently, bricks are transferred to a drying oven where they stay for 24-48 hours. This step is followed by placing the bricks in a kiln for further hardening; depending on the kiln type, bricks are heated at temperatures ranging from 200°C in a moderate kiln to 980°C, or from 870°C to 1300°C in a high kiln over a period of 48-72 hours. Post kiln processing, bricks are moved to the packaging stage and then loaded onto a delivery truck for distribution.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The image illustrates how bricks are manufactured for construction purposes.
Overall, the process includes seven stages of sequential creation, which are completely operated using special equipment.
The process starts when clay, as raw material, is dug by a huge digger. This clay, in the following stage, goes through a metal grid, where it is filtered, and the resulting sand continues on a roller for the next stage. Consequently, clay is mixed in solution with sand and water, and the produced mass can be used to form bricks in the mould or using a wire cutter. The subsequent step takes place in a drying oven where bricks are kept for 24 to 48 hours before being sent into kilns. In the first furnace, bricks are getting heated moderately at 200 to 980 degrees, then in the second kiln, at a high temperature of 870 to 1300 degrees. Having been heated at appropriate temperatures, bricks are kept in a cooling chamber for 48 to 72 hours until they are ready for packaging. Eventually, the final procedure includes delivering the ready material packages to hardware stores or construction sites with trucks, where bricks can be used for building later.
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