Automated Hoisting Pays Off At Two Small Wyoming Mines

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
John G. Roscoe
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
3
File Size:
380 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 7, 1962

Abstract

Continental Materials Corp. operates two under- ground uranium mines in the Crooks Gap district of central Wyoming. Both mines are developed as slusher mining operations through vertical shafts with single level haulage to slusher pocket loading stations. In general, operations at both mines are similar except for depth and some minor details. The shafts are identical in cross-section, each with a 4 ½ x 5-ft hoisting compartment and a 4 ½ x 5-ft manway. Kimberley-type skips are loaded from measuring pockets through air-operated guillotine gates. The Seismic shaft is 245 ft deep and the Reserve shaft depth is 585 ft. The Seismic shaft was sunk in 1957 and the mine has been producing 200 tpd since 1958. The Reserve shaft was sunk in 1960 and the mine is still in the development stage. The hoists of both mines are equipped for semi-automatic operation; that is, they are mechanically controlled to perform a certain cycle of duty and then stop until another cycle is manually initiated. The Seismic hoist, however, was originally a conventional, manually controlled unit; the reserve hoist was installed as an automated system.
Citation

APA: John G. Roscoe  (1962)  Automated Hoisting Pays Off At Two Small Wyoming Mines

MLA: John G. Roscoe Automated Hoisting Pays Off At Two Small Wyoming Mines. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1962.

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