Duluth Paper - Wire Rope Haulage and its Application to Mining

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Frank C. Roberts
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
45
File Size:
1741 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1888

Abstract

Progress in the facilities for handling mining products has been largely superinduced by the necessities of commercial economy ren dered requisite in order to meet the demand of competition. So rapid has been the depreciation in the value of mineral products, primarily due to the disproportionate increase of output over con sumption, that it may be justly claimed that mining, when considered as a commercial success, depends largely upon the ease and cheap ness by which the products are brought to the surface of the ground. In all methods of performing this operation, wire rope enters as an important factor; and the object of the present sketch will be to explain, as fully as is consistent with the space allotted, the various • adaptations of wire rope employed in placing coal and ores within the reach of our overground systems of transportation. These adaptations will be considered in the following order: I. Hoists. II. Inclined planes. a. Engine planes. b. Gravity planes. c. Aerial planes. III. Haulage. a. Tail-rope system. b. Counter-rope system. c. Endless-rope system. IV. Hoists. The term " hoist" is applied to the system whereby the mine product is elevated from the mine-level to the surface through ver-
Citation

APA: Frank C. Roberts  (1888)  Duluth Paper - Wire Rope Haulage and its Application to Mining

MLA: Frank C. Roberts Duluth Paper - Wire Rope Haulage and its Application to Mining. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1888.

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