You know what? I’m just going to tell you what happened.
About eight or nine years back, I was working in this lab in Ahmedabad. Not a big lab. Just two other people and I doing particle size analysis, testing materials, that kind of thing. We needed Test Sieves Manufacturers in Gujarat, and I didn’t really know what I was doing, so I just Googled it and bought from the first guy who looked decent.
The sieves showed up. They looked fine. I started using them and immediately something felt off. I’d test the same batch of material three times and get three different answers. That’s not normal. That’s not how it’s supposed to work.
So I’m frustrated and I call my buddy who works at a textile testing lab—he’s been doing this way longer than me. I ask him what’s wrong with my equipment. He takes one look and says, “Man, your mesh holes aren’t even the same size. Look at this one. Then look at this one. Totally different. That’s your problem right there.”
I felt like an idiot. How was I supposed to know that?
That’s when I started actually paying attention to what goes into a good test sieve. Started visiting manufacturers. Talking to people who actually knew what they were doing. Spending time figuring out who’s legit and who’s just bullshitting.
Here’s what I’ve learned.
The Manufacturers in Gujarat (And What They Actually Are)
Ahmedabad
Most of the manufacturers are in Ahmedabad. That’s just how it is. I’ve probably bought from or talked to six different makers there over the years.
Two of them were actually good. I’m still working with one of them. His name’s Mayank. He’s been making sieves for like 15 years or something. When you talk to him, you realize he actually understands what he’s making. He can tell you why he made certain choices. He knows about mesh quality. He tests everything before it goes out.
The other good one sold his business a few years back. But for the time I worked with him, he was solid. Equipment lasted, results were consistent.
Then there’s the middle ones. They’re fine. They import mesh, put it on frames, sell it. Equipment works okay. It’s not amazing but it’s not terrible. If you’re not too picky and you just need something that works, they’re fine.
And then there’s the one guy I don’t recommend. Found out later he was literally just buying sieves from China, putting his label on them, and selling them as “made in Gujarat.” When something went wrong, he blamed the customer.
Vadodara
Not many people look at Vadodara. They should.
There’s a guy there who’s smaller but actually cares. I found him maybe four years ago. His pricing is better than Ahmedabad because he’s not drowning in inquiries. And because he’s smaller, when you have a problem, he actually deals with it instead of you getting lost in some system.
Surat
Textile industry is there. So some equipment manufacturers. I know one guy who does okay work for textile testing. Haven’t bought from him extensively but he seems legit.
The Reality of Who’s Actually Making This Stuff
When you start talking to manufacturers, you figure out pretty quick who’s real and who’s just reselling.
The real ones—they understand what they’re making. They can talk about why opening size consistency matters. They know about wire diameter. They’ve got quality control. You can visit their place and see actual production happening.
The other guys? You ask them a technical question and they don’t know. They’re importing or buying from distributors and just reselling. When you want something customized, they say it’s not possible. When you ask to visit, they get weird about it.
I called one guy once. Asked him something basic about mesh opening tolerance. He had no idea what I was talking about. Like, completely confused. That told me everything.
What These Things Actually Cost
A single sieve? You’re looking at ₹400 to ₹1,200. Depends on the mesh size and quality.
A set—usually five to eight sieves so you can actually do proper testing—that’s ₹3,000 to ₹7,000. That’s what most people buy.
Better quality stuff, where the openings are actually consistent? ₹6,500 to ₹13,000 for a set.
Industrial grade, where you’re using them all day? ₹11,000 and up.
The cheap stuff? You can find it lower if you look hard. But honestly, you get what you pay for. I’ve bought cheap. It falls apart. You end up buying again six months later. Waste of money.
What Actually Matters (And Nobody Explains It)
The holes need to be the same size. That’s the main thing. When they are, you get consistent results. When they’re not, you don’t.
I tested sieves from three different manufacturers. All similar price. All said they were fine.
First set had holes that varied about 5%. Not great but acceptable. Results were pretty consistent.
Second set was like 8% variation. Results were all over the place.
Third set was maybe 15% variation. Completely useless. I wasted time and materials.
The wire in the mesh needs to be consistent thickness too. If the wires are different thicknesses, the holes are different sizes.
The frame can’t be cheap garbage that bends. When the frame warps, the mesh doesn’t sit flat. Particles go sideways instead of straight through. Messes everything up.
Use stainless steel. It doesn’t rust. It lasts forever. Brass will corrode eventually, especially with wet testing.
And honestly? Good manufacturers actually test their sieves before they send them out. They check opening sizes. They verify consistency. They send you data about it. Bad ones just send whatever comes off the line.
Questions You Actually Need to Ask
“How do you check that the holes are actually the right size?”
Real manufacturers have a process. They can explain it. Bad ones can’t.
“Can you give me test data for the specific sieves I’m buying?”
Good ones will. Bad ones won’t or can’t.
“Can I talk to someone who’s actually using your sieves?”
Call them. Ask if results are consistent. Ask if they’d buy again. That matters more than any website.
“What’s the mesh made of?”
You want stainless steel. Anything else is cheaper for a reason.
“How is it attached to the frame?”
Welded is best. It’s permanent. Screwed can loosen. Glued fails eventually.
“Do you sell just the mesh if I need to replace it?”
Sometimes you need new mesh. Can you get just that? How much?
“Can you make something custom for what I need?”
Some can. Some can’t. If they can’t, they’re probably just reselling.
Why You Should Actually Visit
If you can visit the place where they’re making sieves, do it. You learn so much from just being there.
One guy I visited—workshop was impressive. He had microscopes. Had actual measurement equipment. He showed me how he tests things. He could explain why he made design choices. I walked out thinking, “Okay, this guy actually knows his stuff.”
Another place I visited? Basically just a storage room with boxes of sieves. No production equipment. No testing anything. Just boxes sitting there. That’s when I knew he was just a middleman.
What Good Actually Looks Like
When you use good sieves, the results are consistent. Same material, same test, same result.
Bad sieves? Different result every time. Something’s wrong.
I’ve also noticed that good ones last a long time. I’ve got sieves I bought five years ago that still work fine. The cheap ones? Some lasted less than a year.
Mistakes I Made (Don’t Do These)
I bought the cheapest option once. Total waste. Broke fast. Had to buy again.
I didn’t ask for samples before committing to a full set. Should have.
I trusted a website instead of calling actual people using the equipment.
I bought from someone I only emailed with. Never visited. Should have visited.
I didn’t understand specifications when I was buying. Didn’t know what to ask about.
How to Actually Pick One
Call some manufacturers. Like actually call them, not email. Get a sense of whether they understand what you’re trying to do.
Ask them for names of labs using their sieves. Then call those labs. Ask real questions about real experience.
Ask for sample sieves to test if you can.
If possible, visit them. See where they work. See if it’s a real operation.
Then pick one and work with them. If it goes well, stay with them. If not, move on.
Bottom Line
Finding decent test sieves manufacturers in Gujarat is doable. You just have to actually put in the work.
Visit places. Talk to people. Test equipment. Ask questions.
The person who seems less fancy but actually answers your questions and lets you test stuff? That’s probably your person.
The person with the fancy website who can’t answer questions? Go somewhere else.
That’s it. That’s what I’ve learned.

