How a Screw Oil Press Works
The screw press (also called expeller press or oil expeller) uses a rotating helical screw shaft inside a perforated barrel. As material feeds in, the screw geometry creates progressively increasing pressure — squeezing oil out through the perforations while pushing solid cake forward.
The mechanism is continuous: seed enters at one end, oil drains through the barrel perforations, and dry cake exits at the far end — all simultaneously, without stopping.
Key Operating Parameters
- Barrel temperature: 115–130°C (hot press) or <50°C (cold press)
- Screw speed: 30–60 RPM
- Operating pressure: Built up mechanically — typically 80–200 MPa at the press zone
- Operation type: Continuous — feed in one end, oil and cake out simultaneously
Key advantage: Continuous operation, high throughput (2–14 TPD per unit), suitable for all seed types, relatively simple maintenance. One operator can monitor multiple presses simultaneously.
Cross-section diagram of a screw oil press showing helical screw shaft, perforated barrel, oil drainage channels, cake outlet, feed hopper, technical cutaway illustration, dark engineering styleHow a Hydraulic Oil Press Works
The hydraulic press uses a hydraulic ram to apply direct downward force on a press cage or cloth bag containing seeds. The force squeezes oil out through the cage. It is a batch process: load seeds, press (30–60 minutes), unload cake, reload.
Key Operating Parameters
- Hydraulic pressure: 300–800 bar depending on model
- Batch cycle: 30–60 minutes per batch
- Temperature: Can be ambient (cold) — minimum friction heat generated
- Typical batch size: 5–30 kg seeds per press
Key advantage: Very gentle pressure, minimal heat, highest quality oil for appropriate applications. The simple mechanism has few wear parts. Preferred for olive oil and delicate specialty seed oils where cold-press character is the product's identity.
Head-to-Head Comparison
The table below compares 12 key parameters across both press types. These figures reflect commercial equipment operating under normal conditions.
| Parameter | Screw Oil Press | Hydraulic Oil Press |
|---|---|---|
| Operation mode | Continuous | Batch (30–60 min/batch) |
| Throughput per unit | 2–14 TPD | 0.05–0.3 TPD |
| Oil yield | 87–95% of available | 75–90% of available |
| Residual oil in cake | 5–10% | 10–18% |
| Operating temperature | 50–130°C (adjustable) | Ambient to 50°C |
| Oil quality | Good to premium | Premium (least heat) |
| Suitable seeds | All oilseeds | Olive, specialty seeds |
| Investment (FOB) | $800–$8,500/unit | $1,500–$15,000/unit |
| Labour requirement | Low — 1 operator monitors several | Medium — loading/unloading each batch |
| Maintenance | Regular (press screw, barrel) | Simple (hydraulic seals, press cloths) |
| Annual operating cost | $1,200–$2,000/press | $500–$1,000/press |
| Commercial scale | 1 TPD to 500 TPD | Up to ~2 TPD (multiple units) |

Video: a hydraulic oil press in operation (third-party demonstration).
Throughput Reality
The throughput difference is fundamental and drives most buying decisions. The numbers reveal just how wide the gap is.
A single 6YL-180 screw press processes 8–10 TPD continuously. To match that output with hydraulic presses, you'd need 30–50 units running simultaneously — impractical for any commercial operation.
Hydraulic Press Throughput Math
20 kg seed per batch × 12 batches per hour × 16 hours = 3,840 kg/day = 3.84 TPD per press. But in practice, hydraulic presses use 5–15 kg batch sizes, giving 0.5–1.5 TPD per unit at best. For 10 TPD production you'd need 7–20 hydraulic presses — this defeats the purpose and multiplies labour, floor space, and maintenance accordingly.
Practical conclusion: Hydraulic presses are economically viable only for very small artisan production (<1 TPD total) where premium oil quality commands 3–5× the price of commodity oil and justifies the throughput penalty.
Oil Quality Comparison
Both types can produce high-quality oil. The difference is in what quality characteristics they optimise for — not which is "better" in absolute terms.
Screw Press Quality Advantages
- Can operate as cold press (<50°C) for premium quality — simply reduce RPM
- Consistent, predictable results at commercial scale
- Can tune pressing parameters (speed, temperature, pressure) for specific quality targets
- Crude oil output suitable for refinery input — any quality deficiency is correctable downstream
Hydraulic Press Quality Advantages
- Truly cold operation — ambient temperature, zero mechanical friction heat
- Maximum preservation of heat-sensitive compounds (polyphenols, delicate aromatics)
- Preferred for olive oil — traditional stone/hydraulic press character is commercially valued
- GMP-compliant designs available for nutraceutical and pharmaceutical applications
For most oilseeds (peanut, sesame, sunflower, soybean): both produce equivalent quality at correct operating parameters. The quality difference is most significant for olive oil and very delicate specialty oils where even 50°C is considered too warm.
Cost Analysis — Per Tonne of Capacity
The economics reveal why commercial operations overwhelmingly choose screw presses. The cost per tonne of daily capacity is the most revealing comparison.
| Cost Factor | Screw Press (6YL-180) | Hydraulic Press |
|---|---|---|
| Unit capacity | 9 TPD | 0.2 TPD |
| Unit price FOB | $4,000 | $3,500 |
| Cost per TPD capacity | $444 | $17,500 |
| Units for 10 TPD | 2× (with buffer) | 50+ |
| Total equipment for 10 TPD | ~$10,000 | ~$175,000 |
The economics strongly favour screw presses for commercial production. Hydraulic presses only make economic sense when premium pricing (3–5× commodity price) offsets the throughput and capital penalty — a condition met in some artisan olive oil and specialty oil markets, but not in mainstream edible oil production.
Which Should You Choose?
Use this decision framework based on your specific situation. Most buyers find the right answer is clear once they apply their own numbers.
Choose Screw Press If:
- You plan to produce more than 1 TPD
- Your market is cooking oil, food manufacturing, or standard retail
- You want a scalable operation — add presses as you grow
- Your raw material is soybean, sunflower, peanut, sesame, or rapeseed
- You want the option of both hot-press and cold-press operation
- Budget efficiency per tonne of output is a priority
Choose Hydraulic Press If:
- You're producing olive oil for traditional markets
- You're targeting ultra-premium artisan markets where hand-crafted process adds commercial value
- Your production target is <200 kg/day
- You're producing a delicate specialty oil where maximum phenol preservation is the selling point
- Your buyers specifically request or expect hydraulic-pressed certification
Both approaches combined: Some premium artisan producers use a hydraulic first press ("virgin" oil) followed by a screw press on the remaining cake for a second-grade oil — maximising both quality on the premium batch and total yield economics. This dual-press model works well for specialty olive and sesame operations.