Industrial & Commercial Mixers

Commercial mixers are used to consistently knead dough, whip cream, and blend ingredients. Choose from models intended for all-purpose use or models specific to mixing dough. More

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Planetary Mixers
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Planetary mixers – or all-purpose mixers – can handle a variety of ingredients. These are used in commercial kitchens for different mixing tasks.

Spiral Mixers
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Spiral mixers – also called dough mixers – are often found in bakeries, pizzerias, and other operations mixing large amounts of dough.


KaTom #: 071-SRM12RED
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$4,922.40 / Each Call us for pricing
KaTom #: 071-SRM20RED
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$5,485.20 / Each Call us for pricing
KaTom #: 071-SRM30RED
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$8,276.40 / Each Call us for pricing
KaTom #: 071-SRM40RED
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$9,717.60 / Each Call us for pricing
KaTom #: 071-SRM60RED
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$16,682.40 / Each Call us for pricing
KaTom #: 071-SRM80RED
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$20,932.80 / Each Call us for pricing
KaTom #: 147-V5R
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$1,824.00 / Each Call us for pricing

Commercial mixers for sale are divided into two types: planetary and spiral. For all-purpose use in a kitchen needing to process batches of different ingredients, the planetary style provides the most versatility for handling tasks such as blending, mixing, and whipping. If you're purchasing a commercial mixer for a pizzeria, bakery, or other business that processes large batches of dough, you'll want to invest in a spiral option for thoroughly combing dense ingredients. While spiral models only include a dough hook, planetary units usually come standard with a dough hook, mixing paddle, and whisk.

Your choice of commercial mixer will also depend on the design and bowl capacity your professional foodservice operation requires. Small businesses may need a commercial stand mixer to mix less than 10 quarts at a time, but large operations should invest in heavy-duty floor models – or industrial mixers – meant to handle hundreds of quarts at one time. Bench models, which provide size and capacity options for kitchens with medium-volume production requirements, can be placed on a chef base or similar surface.

Knowing which transmission your commercial mixer needs can help narrow down your options. Industrial mixer machines more commonly have gear-driven transmissions, but belt-driven models are also available. Gear-driven transmissions can more efficiently prepare dense ingredients and may be the better option for a bakery mixer that must repeatedly churn through thick dough. However, both systems are capable of processing batters, doughs, and other mixes.

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