Why the Right Mixer Makes a Difference
The mixing process is fundamental to concrete quality. Proper mixing ensures cement paste uniformly coats every aggregate particle, water is evenly distributed, and no dry pockets remain. Under-mixing results in a non-homogeneous, weak mix; over-mixing can break down aggregate bonds in some admixture-sensitive mixes. Choosing the right mixer for your project type and volume is a practical and economic decision.
Types of Concrete Mixers
1. Drum Mixers (Tilting and Non-Tilting)
The classic drum mixer is the most familiar to DIYers and small contractors. A rotating drum tumbles the ingredients together using fixed blades on the interior.
- Tilting drum: The drum can be angled to discharge. Best for small to medium batches. Easy to use and clean.
- Non-tilting (reversing drum): Larger capacity. Charges and discharges from the same opening. Suitable for site operations producing moderate volumes.
- Typical capacity: 60–350 litres per batch (site mixers)
- Best for: Residential and small commercial work, repairs, footings, small slabs.
2. Pan Mixers
Pan (or planetary) mixers use a stationary horizontal pan with rotating paddles or blades. The shearing and kneading action produces more intensive mixing than drum action.
- Ideal for stiff or low-slump mixes where drum mixers struggle.
- Preferred for precast concrete plants, mortar production, and specialist mixes (e.g., fibre-reinforced, self-compacting).
- Faster mixing cycle than drum mixers.
- Easier to inspect the mix during production.
- Typical capacity: 100 litres to several cubic metres in industrial models.
3. Twin-Shaft Mixers
Used in large precast factories and ready-mix plants, twin-shaft mixers use two counter-rotating horizontal shafts with paddles. They produce highly consistent, thoroughly mixed concrete in short cycle times — typically 45–90 seconds per batch — and handle very large volumes.
4. Volumetric (Mobile) Mixers
Volumetric mixers are essentially mobile batching plants mounted on a truck. They carry separate compartments for cement, aggregate, water, and admixtures, and mix concrete on-site and on-demand to the precise volume required.
- Key advantage: You only pay for exactly what you use — no waste, no leftover mixed concrete.
- Mix specification can be adjusted mid-job (e.g., change slump or grade).
- No time pressure compared to ready-mix trucks with a fixed discharge window.
- Ideal for projects with variable volumes, remote locations, or multiple small pours in one day.
5. Transit (Ready-Mix) Trucks
Transit mixers keep concrete agitated during transport from a central batching plant to the pour location. This is the standard delivery method for most medium to large construction projects.
- Concrete is batched to specification at the plant and delivered ready to use.
- Typical discharge window is 1.5–2 hours from batching.
- Minimum order quantities apply (usually 1–3 cubic metres).
- Most cost-effective for large, single pours.
Comparing Your Options
| Mixer Type | Volume Range | Mix Quality | Best Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Drum Mixer | Small–Medium | Good | DIY, repairs, small slabs |
| Pan Mixer | Small–Large | Excellent | Precast, specialist mixes |
| Twin-Shaft | Large–Industrial | Excellent | Precast plants, large batches |
| Volumetric | Variable | Very Good | Mixed volumes, remote sites |
| Transit Mix | Medium–Large | Very Good | Large single pours |
Tips for Getting the Most from a Site Drum Mixer
- Always add water before dry materials to wet the drum and prevent sticking.
- Load in the sequence: half the water → aggregates → cement → remaining water.
- Mix for a minimum of 2 minutes per batch after all materials are loaded.
- Clean the drum with water and a few aggregate charges at the end of each day.
- Check blade wear regularly — worn blades dramatically reduce mixing efficiency.
Conclusion
For most DIY and small contracting jobs, a quality drum mixer is perfectly adequate and cost-effective. For higher volumes, specialist mixes, or remote sites, volumetric or ready-mix supply is the smarter choice. Understanding the capabilities and limitations of each mixer type helps you plan your project efficiently and avoid costly delays or quality problems on site.