AM Manufacturing builds heavy-duty dough processing equipment for commercial and industrial foodservice operations. With a reputation for mechanical reliability and straightforward maintenance, AM machines are a common choice in pizza production, bakeries, and large kitchen facilities. The product line includes divider/rounders, dough sheeters, and other systems designed for high-volume use and daily wear. Many models are supported with U.S.-based parts and service, helping operators minimize downtime. For over 50 years, AM Manufacturing has delivered practical, operator-friendly solutions trusted by professionals who need durable, production-ready equipment that keeps up with demand.
A commercial dough rounder takes pre-portioned dough pieces and rolls each one into a uniformly smooth, tight ball ready for proofing and shaping. Bakeries, pizza shops, restaurants, hotel breakfast lines, and catering operations use them to replace hand rounding for dinner rolls, hamburger buns, pizza dough balls, bagels, brioche, and bread loaves. The same equipment is also called a dough ball rounder, pizza dough rounder, bun rounder, or bakery dough rounder.
The right commercial dough rounder depends on three things: portion size range, throughput, and whether you want a table top format or a floor model. Catalog units handle portion sizes from 0.5 ounces for small dinner rolls up to 35 ounces for large bread loaves. Throughput runs 900 to 2,000 dough balls per hour. Teflon-coated central spirals handle high-hydration dough (up to 80%) without sticking. No adjustments are needed for size variations across the unit's portion range.
Every commercial dough rounder in this collection is built for daily commercial use. Catalog units include polished stainless steel construction, removable spirals for easy cleaning, single-phase electrical, and optional rotating-table or conveyor-outfeed configurations on the floor models. Common configurations, buying guidance, and frequent buyer questions follow below.
Common Types and Configurations
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Floor-model dough rounder: Floor-standing unit with a central conical or spiral rounding chamber. Catalog units handle 1 to 32 ounce portions across the full range without adjustment. Suited to mid to high-volume bakeries and pizza shops running long production shifts.
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Table top dough rounder: Compact bench-top format for smaller operations. Catalog table top unit handles 1 to 13 ounce dough portions at up to 900 pieces per hour, single-phase. Suited to small bakeries and pizzerias with limited counter space.
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Variable-speed dough rounder: 10-speed variable control lets the operator match rounding speed to dough hydration and product type. Handles 1.1 to 28.2 ounce portions at up to 1,200 balls per hour. Suited to bakeries running multiple dough types from one machine.
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High-hydration Teflon-spiral rounder: Teflon-coated central spiral lets the rounder handle high-hydration doughs and pastries without sticking. Common issue with uncoated metal above 70% hydration is avoided. Removable spiral simplifies cleaning between dough types.
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Rounder with rotating table: Output table rotates to deliver finished dough balls to the operator at a consistent position. Reduces operator strain on long production runs.
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Rounder with conveyor outfeed: Powered conveyor delivers finished dough balls directly into a proofer or rack rather than dropping into a collection bin. Integrates the rounder into a continuous production line.
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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
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Portion size range: Catalog range runs 0.5 ounces up to 35 ounces. Confirm your target portion weight falls within the unit's range. Small dinner rolls and slider buns sit at 0.5 to 2 ounces. Standard hamburger buns sit at 3 to 5 ounces. Pizza dough balls sit at 10 to 20 ounces. Bread loaves sit at 16 to 35 ounces.
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Throughput: Catalog throughput runs 900 to 2,000 dough balls per hour. Small bakeries producing under 500 balls per shift suit a table top unit at 900 per hour. Mid-volume operations need a 1,200 per hour floor model. High-volume bakeries running long production shifts need a 2,000 per hour unit.
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Dough hydration: Standard rounders handle dough up to 65 to 70% hydration. Teflon-coated central spiral models handle high-hydration dough up to 80% without sticking. Choose a Teflon-spiral unit if you run ciabatta, focaccia, sourdough, or other high-hydration recipes.
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Table top vs floor model: Table top units fit on a prep counter and suit small bakeries and pizzerias. Floor models handle higher volume, continuous production runs, and integration with conveyors and proofers.
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Variable speed control: Multi-speed rounders let the operator tune rounding speed to dough hydration, gluten development, and product type. Useful for bakeries running multiple recipes on the same machine.
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Outfeed configuration: Plain outfeed drops finished balls into a collection bin or bench. Rotating-table outfeed delivers balls to a consistent operator position. Conveyor outfeed integrates the rounder into a continuous production line feeding a proofer or rack.
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Cleaning access: Removable spirals, accessible rounding chambers, and stainless steel food-contact surfaces matter for daily sanitation. Confirm tool-free spiral removal on units that run multiple dough types per shift.
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Voltage: Catalog units run on single-phase power. Confirm electrical service at the install location before ordering.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a commercial dough rounder used for?
A commercial dough rounder takes pre-portioned dough pieces and rolls each one into a uniformly smooth, tight ball ready for proofing and shaping. Bakeries use them to round dinner rolls, hamburger buns, brioche, bagels, and bread loaves. Pizza shops use them to round pizza dough balls. Hotel breakfast lines and catering operations use them to produce hundreds of identical rolls per shift without hand rounding. The rounding action mimics what an experienced baker does by hand, but the machine produces consistent results regardless of operator skill and at production speeds hand-rounding cannot match.
What is the difference between a dough rounder and a dough divider rounder?
A dough rounder only rounds; it takes pre-portioned dough pieces from a divider or scale and shapes each piece into a ball. A dough divider rounder does both jobs in one machine: it divides a bulk dough load into equal portions and rounds each piece into a ball in a single cycle. Dough rounders suit bakeries that already use a divider or scale separately and want a dedicated rounding stage in the line. Dough divider rounders suit operations that want one machine to handle both steps, especially in lower-volume kitchens where floor space matters more than line throughput.
What size commercial dough rounder do I need (portion range and throughput)?
Match the unit to your target portion size and shift volume. Small bakeries and pizzerias producing under 500 balls per shift suit a table top unit at 900 pieces per hour with a 1 to 13 ounce portion range. Mid-volume bakeries producing 500 to 1,500 balls per shift need a floor model at 1,200 balls per hour with a 1 to 32 ounce portion range. High-volume bakeries running 1,500 balls or more per shift need a 2,000 balls per hour floor model. If you produce high-hydration dough above 70%, look for a Teflon-spiral unit. If you run a continuous production line, add a conveyor-outfeed configuration.
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