Comparative Costs of In bye Power in a Mine as Derived from Compressed Air or Electric Sources

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Mark W. Booth
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
17
File Size:
6147 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1936

Abstract

THIS paper deals with the subject of inbye power as the mechanical . engineer sees it, and invites discussion, particularly from the electrical engineer. At the outset, it will be necessary to clear the ground a little by some definite statements. In this question of compressed air versus electricity for the transmission of power and driving of machinery in underground workings, we must see that there are definite fields that compressed air on the one hand, and electricity on the other, can fill to much greater advantage than the other, and in which there can be little or no direct competition, at least for the present. It is under conditions where these fields overlap, and as to where the line must be drawn between the two, that the respective merits of each must be considered. Steam was the first means used to transmit power from the surface of a mine to drive underground machinery, and so long as distances were short and means possible to ensure fairly efficient use of the steam, and where the fire hazard was not in evidence, it gave fairly efficient service. I have in mind an instance during my own connection with the mines-a duplex pump at the shaft bottom at Princess colliery, driven by steam, and which used the steam compound and condensing; and, but for the mechanical difficulties, it was a not inefficient proposition. The steam was taken direct from the surface boiler-plant through a line down the shaft, and used directly at the pump, being in effect a straight conversion from coal to steam to work done. It was the mechanical arrangement, and failure of the pump in that direction, that led to its removal and replacement by something better in the way of an electrically driven turbine pump. Given modern mechanical arrangements, such as a steam-turbine drive on a high-speed turbine pump, and all other parts made in accordance with best practice in the art of steam generation and use, a steam-driven unit fully as economical would have been obtained. But the central electric supply station, and all that that means or promises (not always the same), turned the scale against steam.
Citation

APA: Mark W. Booth  (1936)  Comparative Costs of In bye Power in a Mine as Derived from Compressed Air or Electric Sources

MLA: Mark W. Booth Comparative Costs of In bye Power in a Mine as Derived from Compressed Air or Electric Sources. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1936.

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