In mineral processing, the semi-autogenous (SAG) mill plays a unique role. Unlike traditional mills that rely solely on steel balls, a SAG mill uses two types of grinding media: a small charge of steel balls, typically occupying 8–15% of the mill’s volume, and the ore itself.
As the mill rotates, both the steel balls and large chunks of rock tumble together. This motion generates high-energy impacts that fracture the coarser material. At the same time, finer particles are ground down through attrition and compression between the larger media.
Water transforms the mixture into a slurry, which continuously exits through a grate. The result is an efficient, uninterrupted process that handles high throughput with relative ease.
So, when should a SAG mill be chosen over a ball mill? The answer lies mainly in ore characteristics and project scale. SAG mills excel in large-tonnage operations where the feed can be coarse, sometimes up to 400 mm, thereby reducing or even eliminating the need for multiple crushing stages.
They are particularly advantageous when the ore is competent and variable in hardness, offering more flexibility than fully autogenous (AG) mills, which depend entirely on rock-on-rock breakage.
A practical rule of thumb also exists: if the rod mill work index (RWi) is less than or equal to the ball mill work index (BWi), SAG milling tends to be more efficient.
Ultimately, engineers prefer SAG mills when simplicity, lower capital expenditure, and tolerance for feed size variation outweigh the potential for slightly higher steel consumption. In such cases, the SAG mill becomes not just an option, but the logical choice.

