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LBC Bakery KM-120P 120 kg Spiral Pizza Dough Mixer, 264 lb Dough Capacity with Reversible Bowl and Hook

SKUKM-120P BrandLBC Bakery

The LBC Bakery KM-120P Spiral Dough Mixer

The LBC Bakery KM-120P is a fixed-bowl spiral mixer purpose-built for low-moisture doughs: pizza and bagel formulas stiff enough to strain a general-purpose machine. That focus is the point. Stiff dough fights the hook on every rotation, so LBC built this mixer around torque, rigidity, and drive redundancy instead of versatility. It is not suited for bread or pastry doughs; run it on what it was made for and it will turn out triple-bag pizza batches year after year.

Hook Geometry That Works Stiff Dough

The cylindrical dough hook ends in a "J" profile that reaches the center of the bowl, holding an average clearance of 5/16 inch without ever touching stainless. That close pass is what develops a tight dough quickly: the hook keeps folding the mass against the breaker bar instead of spinning it in place. The breaker bar itself is wrought stainless steel rather than cast, fixed to the head with four stainless bolts, a distinction that matters the first time a full batch loads it up. Polyethylene guide rollers on sealed ball bearings steady the bowl rim from above, so the hook-to-bowl geometry stays true under load.

Independent, Reversible Drives

Bowl and hook run on separate reversible motors. Reversing direction during incorporation pulls dry flour down into the mass instead of letting it ride on top, which is where stiff batches usually waste their first minutes. The hook gives you two forward speeds through a dual-reduction drive, and the timer changes speed automatically mid-cycle, so a batch can start slow for incorporation and finish fast for development with nobody standing over it. Power moves through a dual-stage, non-slip belt system that keeps the torque high and the noise low.

Controls Built For a Production Floor

Everything the operator touches sits at eye level on the front panel: digital timer and speed indicator, emergency stop, and a manual back-up control that keeps the mixer running even if the digital side fails, which is the difference between a service call and a lost production day. The interlocked bowl cover and hook guard stop the machine the moment they open, while the fill opening at the front of the cover lets ingredients go in mid-mix without lifting the guard at all. Automatic over-current protection backs up the motors, so an overloaded batch trips a breaker instead of cooking a winding.

Frame, Feet, And Wheels

A welded heavy-gauge steel frame box with a torsion-tube design keeps the head section and bearing box rigid against the twisting loads a spiral mixer generates at full capacity. When cleaning day comes, the three-point caster system, one forward swivel caster and two rear fixed wheels, lets one person roll a machine this heavy away from the wall; four screw-down cushioned feet, mounted external to the base where they are easy to reach, plant it back in place for production. The mixer connects through a 6-foot supply cord with a NEMA cap, so repositioning it is a matter of unplugging, not rewiring.

About LBC Bakery

LBC Bakery Equipment designs and manufactures bakery equipment for supermarkets, independent bakeries, foodservice operations, and institutional kitchens across North America. Since beginning production in 2001, the company has focused on equipment engineered for the North American market with U.S. and Canadian safety and sanitation approvals. Its lineup includes rack ovens, proofers, retarders, mixers, pizza ovens, and rotisserie equipment, with an emphasis on energy-efficient oven technology and practical control system improvements. Its equipment is used in retail bakeries, supermarket bakeries, commissaries, and food production facilities where consistent performance and straightforward operation are priorities.

Features & Benefits

  1. Mixes large pizza and bagel batches at a 120 kilogram working capacity per cycle
  2. Handles roughly three 50-lb bags of flour per batch at a 60/40 flour-to-water ratio
  3. Cylindrical "J" type dough hook with 5/16" clearance reaches the bowl center for rapid development
  4. 2-speed reversible dough hook motor with an independent reversible bowl drive motor
  5. High-torque dual-stage, non-slip belt drive system for quiet, powerful mixing
  6. Heavy-gauge stainless steel bowl with solid welded and polished stainless top ring
  7. Heavy-duty dough breaker bar and solid bowl top roll for clean, consistent batches
  8. 60-minute timer with automatic speed change plus a manual back-up control system
  9. Front-mounted controls with emergency stop and automatic over-current protection
  10. Interlocking bowl cover and hook guard with front ingredient fill opening for safety
  11. Three-point caster system for easy cleaning with screw-down cushioned feet for stability
  12. Rigid welded steel frame with torsion-tube design and 6' cord with NEMA cord cap

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$17,390.00
  • Mixes large pizza and bagel batches at a 120 kilogram working capacity per cycle
  • Handles roughly three 50-lb bags of flour per batch at a 60/40 flour-to-water ratio
  • Cylindrical "J" type dough hook with 5/16" clearance reaches the bowl center for rapid development
  • 2-speed reversible dough hook motor with an independent reversible bowl drive motor
  • High-torque dual-stage, non-slip belt drive system for quiet, powerful mixing
  • See full feature list

    The LBC Bakery KM-120P Spiral Dough Mixer

    The LBC Bakery KM-120P is a fixed-bowl spiral mixer purpose-built for low-moisture doughs: pizza and bagel formulas stiff enough to strain a general-purpose machine. That focus is the point. Stiff dough fights the hook on every rotation, so LBC built this mixer around torque, rigidity, and drive redundancy instead of versatility. It is not suited for bread or pastry doughs; run it on what it was made for and it will turn out triple-bag pizza batches year after year.

    Hook Geometry That Works Stiff Dough

    The cylindrical dough hook ends in a "J" profile that reaches the center of the bowl, holding an average clearance of 5/16 inch without ever touching stainless. That close pass is what develops a tight dough quickly: the hook keeps folding the mass against the breaker bar instead of spinning it in place. The breaker bar itself is wrought stainless steel rather than cast, fixed to the head with four stainless bolts, a distinction that matters the first time a full batch loads it up. Polyethylene guide rollers on sealed ball bearings steady the bowl rim from above, so the hook-to-bowl geometry stays true under load.

    Independent, Reversible Drives

    Bowl and hook run on separate reversible motors. Reversing direction during incorporation pulls dry flour down into the mass instead of letting it ride on top, which is where stiff batches usually waste their first minutes. The hook gives you two forward speeds through a dual-reduction drive, and the timer changes speed automatically mid-cycle, so a batch can start slow for incorporation and finish fast for development with nobody standing over it. Power moves through a dual-stage, non-slip belt system that keeps the torque high and the noise low.

    Controls Built For a Production Floor

    Everything the operator touches sits at eye level on the front panel: digital timer and speed indicator, emergency stop, and a manual back-up control that keeps the mixer running even if the digital side fails, which is the difference between a service call and a lost production day. The interlocked bowl cover and hook guard stop the machine the moment they open, while the fill opening at the front of the cover lets ingredients go in mid-mix without lifting the guard at all. Automatic over-current protection backs up the motors, so an overloaded batch trips a breaker instead of cooking a winding.

    Frame, Feet, And Wheels

    A welded heavy-gauge steel frame box with a torsion-tube design keeps the head section and bearing box rigid against the twisting loads a spiral mixer generates at full capacity. When cleaning day comes, the three-point caster system, one forward swivel caster and two rear fixed wheels, lets one person roll a machine this heavy away from the wall; four screw-down cushioned feet, mounted external to the base where they are easy to reach, plant it back in place for production. The mixer connects through a 6-foot supply cord with a NEMA cap, so repositioning it is a matter of unplugging, not rewiring.

    About LBC Bakery

    LBC Bakery Equipment designs and manufactures bakery equipment for supermarkets, independent bakeries, foodservice operations, and institutional kitchens across North America. Since beginning production in 2001, the company has focused on equipment engineered for the North American market with U.S. and Canadian safety and sanitation approvals. Its lineup includes rack ovens, proofers, retarders, mixers, pizza ovens, and rotisserie equipment, with an emphasis on energy-efficient oven technology and practical control system improvements. Its equipment is used in retail bakeries, supermarket bakeries, commissaries, and food production facilities where consistent performance and straightforward operation are priorities.

    Features & Benefits

    1. Mixes large pizza and bagel batches at a 120 kilogram working capacity per cycle
    2. Handles roughly three 50-lb bags of flour per batch at a 60/40 flour-to-water ratio
    3. Cylindrical "J" type dough hook with 5/16" clearance reaches the bowl center for rapid development
    4. 2-speed reversible dough hook motor with an independent reversible bowl drive motor
    5. High-torque dual-stage, non-slip belt drive system for quiet, powerful mixing
    6. Heavy-gauge stainless steel bowl with solid welded and polished stainless top ring
    7. Heavy-duty dough breaker bar and solid bowl top roll for clean, consistent batches
    8. 60-minute timer with automatic speed change plus a manual back-up control system
    9. Front-mounted controls with emergency stop and automatic over-current protection
    10. Interlocking bowl cover and hook guard with front ingredient fill opening for safety
    11. Three-point caster system for easy cleaning with screw-down cushioned feet for stability
    12. Rigid welded steel frame with torsion-tube design and 6' cord with NEMA cord cap

    Resources & Downloads

    See all from LBC Bakery

    Specifications

    Bowl Capacity120 kg
    Flour Capacity165 lb
    Dough Capacity264 lb
    Bags Per Batch3 (50 lb)
    Dough HookCylindrical "J" type, 5/16" clearance
    Hook Speeds2-speed reversible
    Bowl DriveReversible
    Mixing Motor6 to 12 HP
    Total Power9.55 kW
    Electrical208-220 VAC, 3 phase, 40 A
    Timer60 minutes, auto speed change
    Dimensions (H x W x D)55.1" x 32.6" x 53.1"
    Actual Weight1300 lb
    Shipping Weight1442 lb
    Bowl MaterialStainless steel

    Manufacturer's Warranty

    • 1 Year

      Labor

    • 1 Year

      Parts

    Certifications & Approvals

    • CETLUS
      ETL US & Canada
    • ETLSAN
      ETL Sanitation

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    The LBC Bakery KM-120P Spiral Dough Mixer

    About LBC Bakery

    LBC Bakery Equipment designs and manufactures bakery equipment for supermarkets, independent bakeries, foodservice operations, and institutional kitchens across North America. Since beginning production in 2001, the company has focused on equipment engineered for the North American market with U.S. and Canadian safety and sanitation approvals. Its lineup includes rack ovens, proofers, retarders, mixers, pizza ovens, and rotisserie equipment, with an emphasis on energy-efficient oven technology and practical control system improvements. Its equipment is used in retail bakeries, supermarket bakeries, commissaries, and food production facilities where consistent performance and straightforward operation are priorities.

    About Spiral Dough Mixers

    A commercial spiral dough mixer kneads bread, pizza, bagel, and brioche dough. The bowl and spiral agitator rotate in opposite directions. The spiral motion folds the dough against a fixed center post, builds gluten quickly, and keeps the dough cool during long mixing cycles. Bakeries, pizzerias, restaurants, hotel breakfast lines, and bagel shops use them in place of planetary mixers when the priority is dough development and temperature control. The same equipment is also called a spiral mixer, pizza dough mixer, or bakery spiral mixer.

    The right commercial spiral dough mixer depends on three things: bowl capacity, fixed or removable bowl, and the number of speeds. Catalog units cover everything from a 10 qt countertop unit kneading 13 lb of dough up to a 412 qt floor model handling 440 lb. Two speeds are the standard in production bakeries: a slow speed for initial flour incorporation and autolyse, a fast speed for gluten development. Variable-speed options run as fine as 15-speed control for operators that mix multiple dough hydrations on one machine. Removable bowls let one base machine run with multiple dough types throughout the shift. Common configurations, buying guidance, and frequent buyer questions follow below.

    Common Types and Configurations

    • Countertop spiral dough mixer: Compact bench-top unit suited to pizzerias, small bakeries, and prep kitchens with limited floor space. Catalog countertop units start at 10 qt bowl capacity and 13 lb dough capacity, single-phase 110V or 220V. Suits operations producing fewer than 50 pizza balls per shift.
    • Floor-model spiral dough mixer: Floor-standing units for mid- to high-volume production. Catalog floor units cover 22 qt up to 412 qt bowls and 22 lb up to 440 lb dough capacity. Standard format for production bakeries, multi-shift pizzerias, and bagel shops.
    • Fixed-bowl spiral dough mixer: Bowl is permanently attached to the machine. Lower cost, simpler maintenance, and faster cycle-to-cycle turnaround on a single dough type. Suits operations running one or two recipes per day.
    • Removable-bowl spiral dough mixer: Bowl detaches and rolls out on a stand or trolley. The same base machine handles multiple dough types per shift by swapping bowls. Suits bakeries running pizza, bread, and brioche from one footprint.
    • Two-speed spiral dough mixer: Slow speed for initial flour and water incorporation and autolyse, fast speed for gluten development. The two-speed format is the production-bakery standard because gluten development is the function that defines spiral mixer output quality.
    • Variable-speed spiral dough mixer: Continuously variable speed control, with up to 15-speed selection on select countertop units. Suited to bakeries mixing multiple hydrations or styles (Neapolitan pizza dough at 60%, ciabatta at 80%, brioche, bagels) from one machine.
    • Spiral mixer with built-in lifter: Floor model with a powered bowl lifter. Raises the loaded bowl off the floor for hands-free emptying into a divider or proofer. Standard on bakery production lines moving 200 lb or more per batch.
    • Spiral mixer with tilting head: The mixer head tilts up for bowl removal and cleaning access. Reduces operator strain on cleanup between dough types.
    • Twin-motor spiral mixer: Independent motors drive the bowl and the spiral agitator. Allows finer dough-development control and handles heavier loads at lower stress on either drivetrain.
    • Polished stainless steel construction: Standard across the catalog. Food-contact surfaces are stainless steel for sanitation and corrosion resistance during daily wash-down.

    What to Look at Before You Buy

    • Bowl capacity and dough capacity: The two numbers do not match. A 22 qt bowl holds about 22 lb of dough, not 22 lb of flour. Catalog bowls run 10 qt up to 412 qt; dough capacity runs 13 lb up to 440 lb. Size the mixer to the largest single batch, then add 30% headroom for safety. Underfilling a spiral mixer also hurts dough quality, so a 100 lb bakery should not buy a 200 lb mixer.
    • Fixed vs removable bowl: Fixed-bowl units cost less and run faster between cycles on a single dough type. Removable-bowl units let the same base machine run with multiple bowls, so the bakery can mix pizza dough in one bowl while bread dough finishes in another. The premium pays back fast when running more than one recipe per shift.
    • Single speed vs two-speed: Two-speed is the production-bakery standard. Slow speed incorporates flour and water without heating the dough; fast speed develops gluten. A single-speed mixer can produce excellent dough on simple recipes but limits operator control on high-hydration or extended-development doughs.
    • Variable-speed control: Variable-speed mixers tune speed to dough hydration and product type on the fly. Operators running ciabatta or sourdough alongside pizza dough get more consistent results than they can with a fixed two-speed unit.
    • Hydration handling: Spiral mixers are the preferred technology above 65% hydration because the spiral folds dough without overheating it. High-hydration doughs (ciabatta, focaccia, sourdough, Neapolitan pizza) develop better in a spiral mixer than in a planetary mixer.
    • Built-in timer: Digital timers cut cycles automatically and free the operator for other tasks. Standard on Italian-made units in the catalog. Worth the premium on units running back-to-back cycles all day.
    • Countertop vs floor model: Countertop units fit on a prep bench in a pizzeria or small bakery. Floor models handle higher batch sizes, continuous production, and integration with dividers and proofers downstream.
    • Voltage and phase: Catalog units include 110V single-phase (smallest countertop), 220V single-phase (most mid-size), and 208V or 220V three-phase (largest production units). Three-phase service is required for floor models above roughly 100 lb dough capacity. Confirm electrical service at the install location before ordering.
    • Cleaning access: Removable bowls, tilting heads, and stainless steel food-contact surfaces matter for daily wash-down. Confirm tool-free access to the spiral and bowl for operations running multiple dough types per shift.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is a commercial spiral dough mixer used for?

    A commercial spiral dough mixer kneads dough for bread, pizza, bagels, brioche, ciabatta, focaccia, and sourdough. The bowl and the spiral agitator rotate in opposite directions. The motion folds the dough against a fixed center post and develops gluten quickly while keeping the dough cool. Bakeries use them because spiral mixing produces better gluten structure on bread doughs than planetary mixing does. Pizza shops use them because spiral mixing handles the high hydration levels (60 to 80%) that Neapolitan and other premium pizza styles require. Hotel breakfast lines and bagel shops use them to mix 200 lb or more of bagel or roll dough per shift on one machine.

    Spiral dough mixer vs planetary dough mixer, which is right for my bakery or pizzeria?

    Spiral mixers and planetary mixers serve different jobs. A spiral mixer is purpose-built for dough. The spiral agitator and counter-rotating bowl develop gluten quickly without overheating the dough, so the output is consistent on high-hydration recipes like ciabatta, sourdough, and Neapolitan pizza. A planetary mixer is general-purpose. The same machine mixes batter, frosting, mashed potato, dough, and almost any other product because it accepts paddle, whip, and hook attachments. For a dedicated bakery or pizzeria mixing dough as the primary product, the spiral mixer produces better dough quality with less attention from the operator. For a restaurant or pastry shop mixing many product types from one machine, the planetary mixer is the more flexible choice. Many bakeries run both, a spiral for bread and pizza dough and a planetary for cakes, frostings, and side products.

    What size commercial spiral dough mixer do I need?

    Size the mixer to the largest single batch the operation produces, then add 30% headroom. Small pizzerias and bakeries producing under 50 lb of dough per batch fit on a countertop unit with a 10 to 22 qt bowl. Mid-size pizzerias and bagel shops producing 50 to 100 lb per batch fit a 30 to 60 qt floor model. Production bakeries running 100 to 200 lb per batch fit a 60 to 130 qt floor model. High-volume bagel shops, commissary bakeries, and pizza-dough producers running 200 lb or more per batch need a 130 to 412 qt floor unit. Those units typically need three-phase power and a built-in bowl lifter. Underfilling a spiral mixer also hurts dough quality, so do not oversize past the 30% headroom rule. A 50 lb bakery should not buy a 200 lb mixer.

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    Product Features

    1. Mixes large pizza and bagel batches at a 120 kilogram working capacity per cycle
    2. Handles roughly three 50-lb bags of flour per batch at a 60/40 flour-to-water ratio
    3. Cylindrical "J" type dough hook with 5/16" clearance reaches the bowl center for rapid development
    4. 2-speed reversible dough hook motor with an independent reversible bowl drive motor
    5. High-torque dual-stage, non-slip belt drive system for quiet, powerful mixing
    6. Heavy-gauge stainless steel bowl with solid welded and polished stainless top ring
    7. Heavy-duty dough breaker bar and solid bowl top roll for clean, consistent batches
    8. 60-minute timer with automatic speed change plus a manual back-up control system
    9. Front-mounted controls with emergency stop and automatic over-current protection
    10. Interlocking bowl cover and hook guard with front ingredient fill opening for safety
    11. Three-point caster system for easy cleaning with screw-down cushioned feet for stability
    12. Rigid welded steel frame with torsion-tube design and 6' cord with NEMA cord cap

    See all from LBC Bakery

    Specifications

    Bowl Capacity120 kg
    Flour Capacity165 lb
    Dough Capacity264 lb
    Bags Per Batch3 (50 lb)
    Dough HookCylindrical "J" type, 5/16" clearance
    Hook Speeds2-speed reversible
    Bowl DriveReversible
    Mixing Motor6 to 12 HP
    Total Power9.55 kW
    Electrical208-220 VAC, 3 phase, 40 A
    Timer60 minutes, auto speed change
    Dimensions (H x W x D)55.1" x 32.6" x 53.1"
    Actual Weight1300 lb
    Shipping Weight1442 lb
    Bowl MaterialStainless steel

    Manufacturer's Warranty

      1 year

      Labor

      1 year

      Parts

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