Discussion - Novel design for a thin seam shuttle car featuring an ergonomic operator compartment - by A.G. Mayton, J.R. Bartels, and W.D. Mayercheck Technical Papers. Mining Engineering, Vol. 41, No. 11 November- 1990,pp. 1132-1134

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 1
- File Size:
- 80 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1991
Abstract
The paper under discussion provides an excellent and concise study of compartment ergonomics for thin seam equipment. However, in accomplishing this, some very important operational aspects were ignored. Since these are likely to be determinant, the authors' response is solicited. The novel shuttle car with its cross-car, end-mounted compartment is operationally very different from the current one. The latter can be considered a highly mobile extension of the continuous miner or loader, with a pass-through conveyor, dump boom, and extra storage. As such, the vehicle's kinematics are the simple "I," or shuttle pattern, bent for going around pillars, with an intermediate stop at the "change-out point" (Adler, 1986 ). The action of the cable reel adjusts well to this pattern. The proposed shuttle car's motion either superimposes a "Y," time is lost (5 seconds) for each cycle, space is needed, line of sight is compromised, and a cable anchor is probably required at the dump. A chute is almost prohibitive in construction time and cost. The lack of a dump boom further curtails flexibility in the proposal. The value of a standard hand and opposite standard hand configuration also needs consideration. Many front-end loaders have a rocker (overshot) capability that is designed to achieve an "I” pattern. And crawler loaders sometimes use a side dumping bucket variant for the same purpose. These examples indicate the pattern's importance. For underground, thin seam application, the ram car has become popular. This is an articulated truck, battery-powered, and with an ejector dump. Its operational patterns would be similar to the novel shuttle car, except without the loading flexibility provided by a conveyor. Since the cab location of the proposed shuttle car largely obviates some of the major advantages of the present shuttle car, the question arises whether this configuration could be adapted to the current ram car and scoop
Citation
APA:
(1991) Discussion - Novel design for a thin seam shuttle car featuring an ergonomic operator compartment - by A.G. Mayton, J.R. Bartels, and W.D. Mayercheck Technical Papers. Mining Engineering, Vol. 41, No. 11 November- 1990,pp. 1132-1134MLA: Discussion - Novel design for a thin seam shuttle car featuring an ergonomic operator compartment - by A.G. Mayton, J.R. Bartels, and W.D. Mayercheck Technical Papers. Mining Engineering, Vol. 41, No. 11 November- 1990,pp. 1132-1134. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1991.