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Cashew processing guide

Why Raw Cashew Grading Comes Before Steaming and Shelling

Practical guidance for comparing cashew processing machines, preparing capacity details, and planning your equipment requirement.

This guide explains the role of raw cashew grading, how it connects to steaming and shelling, what to look for in grading equipment, and how to match grading capacity to your processing goals. It is written for processors, production managers, and technical buyers who need practical, clear information without sales language.

What Raw Cashew Grading Means in Processing

Raw cashew grading is the process of sorting in-shell cashew nuts by size before any heat treatment or mechanical shelling takes place. The goal is to group nuts with similar dimensions together. Size affects how heat penetrates during steaming, how force is applied during shelling, and how uniform the kernel recovery will be later.

Grading is not about nut appearance. It is a pre-processing step that directly influences the rest of the line. When nuts of mixed sizes go through steaming, smaller nuts may overheat while larger ones stay under-conditioned. During shelling, a machine set for average nuts will crush small ones or leave large ones unshelled. Proper grading prevents these mismatches.

Why Grading Matters Before Steaming and Shelling

Skipping raw cashew grading may save time initially, but it creates multiple quality and yield problems downstream. Uneven nut size leads to uneven moisture absorption in steaming, inconsistent shell brittleness, and a higher percentage of broken kernels. The shelling machine cannot be optimized if nut dimensions vary widely, and kernel output suffers.

Grading also protects more expensive equipment further down the line. When shelling machines encounter nuts that are too large or too small for their adjustment range, jams, blade wear, and mechanical stress increase. A consistent raw material feed keeps maintenance intervals predictable and extends machinery life.

Processing Outcome With Raw Cashew Grading Without Grading
Steaming uniformity Each size batch achieves target moisture evenly Over/under-steamed nuts, uneven shell conditioning
Shelling efficiency Higher whole kernel recovery, fewer broken pieces High breakage, machine jams, inconsistent output
Kernel quality Better color, shape, and grade after peeling Scorched or damaged kernels, lower commercial value
Machine wear Predictable load, fewer sudden failures Frequent adjustments, higher maintenance costs

How Raw Cashew Grading Equipment Works

Most raw cashew grading machines use rotating drums or vibrating sieves with holes or slots sized to specific nut counts per kilogram. Nuts are fed into the machine, and as they move through different sections, smaller nuts fall through narrower openings while larger nuts continue onward. The result is several size fractions, each ready for separate steaming and shelling.

Common grading machine types include:

The choice depends on desired throughput, nut condition, and space. A separate detailed guide on raw cashew grading equipment covers machine types, calibration, and sizing standards in depth.

Key Selection Criteria for a Raw Cashew Grading Machine

When comparing grading machines, focus on these practical factors:

Matching Grading Capacity to Your Processing Line

Capacity planning starts with a simple question: how many kilograms of raw nuts will enter the line per hour or per day? The grading step must process that volume without creating a backlog. A common mistake is to buy a grader that matches the theoretical maximum of the shelling section, only to find that nut size variation slows down the grader itself.

As a rough planning guide:

Always allow a buffer of 15–20% above nominal capacity to account for nut moisture variation, partial blockages, and operator breaks.

Common Mistakes When Skipping or Rushing Grading

Even when a grader is installed, poor practices can undermine its value. These are the most frequent mistakes seen in processing facilities:

Preparing an RFQ for Raw Cashew Grading Equipment

When you are ready to request quotations for grading machinery, a clear requirement helps suppliers propose equipment that fits your actual processing needs rather than generic options. Include the following details:

Checklist for a raw cashew grading equipment RFQ:

Providing this information upfront avoids over-specification and helps you compare proposals based on real performance promises, not just brochure numbers.

Final Takeaway

Raw cashew grading is not an optional step for processors who care about kernel yield, machine longevity, and consistent product quality. By separating nuts into uniform size groups before steaming and shelling, you give every downstream process a better starting point. The right grading equipment, matched to your capacity and operated correctly, turns a variable raw material into a stable input for high-quality cashew kernel production.

Frequently Asked Questions


Why is raw cashew grading done before steaming and not after?
Grading after steaming does not correct the problem; by then, moisture and shell condition have already been affected by nut size. Size separation before steaming ensures each batch gets the right heat treatment.

What happens to undersized nuts that are separated during grading?
Undersized nuts can still be processed, but they need separate steaming and shelling parameters. Some processors sell them to smaller facilities or use them for lower-grade products if kernels are too small.

How many size fractions should a grader produce?
Most lines need 3–5 fractions. Too few fractions still cause shelling variability; too many make operation complex without a proportional quality gain. The ideal number depends on the raw material uniformity of your supply.

Can one grader handle different raw cashew origins?
Yes, but you must adjust screen sizes and possibly feed rate. Nuts from different regions often differ in size and moisture, so recalibration between lots is necessary.

What is a reasonable grading accuracy to expect from a modern machine?
A well-maintained vibratory or drum grader should achieve 90–95% size purity per fraction. Higher accuracy usually comes with lower throughput, so balance is important.

How often should grader screens be inspected or replaced?
Inspect weekly for holes, tears, and clogs. Replace when openings become enlarged by more than 10% of original specification, or when throughput drops due to blinding.

Is raw cashew grading necessary for small-scale processing?
Yes. Even at small scale, hand grading with simple sieves or small motorized graders improves kernel recovery enough to pay for the extra step quickly. Skipping it leads to high breakage and wasted nuts.

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