This paper investigates a new design of dynamic filtration system which has become recently available. The pilot unit tested contains 12 ceramic membrane disks with 0.2μm pores, 9.0cm in diameter, mounted on two parallel shafts rotating in the same direction at the same speed and surrounded by a steel housing. The fluid is sheared between overlapping disks. The differential speed (DV n ) between two adjacent disks has been shown to be uniform in the overlapping region and 51% higher than the azimuthal rim speed of a disk. Test fluids were CaCO 3 suspensions at various concentrations ranging from 100 to 280gL −1 and 24°C. Permeate fluxes obtained at 1930rpm (DV n =13.47ms −1 ) and 200kPa were very high, ranging from 880Lh −1 m −2 at 100gL −1 to 720Lh −1 m −2 at 280gL −1 . At 738rpm (DV n =5.25ms −1 ), these fluxes were respectively, 690 and 430Lh −1 m −2 . When a system with rotating membranes is operated at a fixed inlet pressure, its permeate flux rises with increasing speed until it reaches a maximum and decreases at higher speed, due to build-up of permeate pressure caused by centrifugal forces, which reduces the transmembrane pressure. In our pilot, this phenomenon was only observed at low inlet pressures. Rotation speeds at which a maximum flux occurred were 800rpm at 40kPa and 1600rpm at 75kPa.A comparison with a single rotating disk module, using an identical stationary ceramic membrane and the same test fluids, has shown that, for the same disk azimuthal rim velocity, permeate fluxes in this case were about half of those with the two-shaft pilot.