Florida Paper - Notes on a Southern Coal-Washing Plant (see Discussion p. 990)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
J. J. Ormsbee
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
18
File Size:
635 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1896

Abstract

Attempts at coal-washing have been made in the southern states during the last twenty years; but it is only within the last four or five years that the practice has become at all general. It might perhaps be claimed as one of the blessings derived from our departed " booms;" for, during their sway, the supply of coal of all qualities, good and bad, could not equal the demand; but, with the subsidence of the inflated demand, came imperative calls for fuels of better quality; and washers, previously regarded as luxuries, became necessities. Among those now in use in this section are representatives of the following types or classes: the trough washer; the jig washer; the percussive table; and those washers in which a constant upward current of water effects the separation. Without having full statistics, it is safe to say that there are in successful operation in the South more washers of the last class than of any of the others. The purpose of these notes is to present data with regard to the constructiOn, operation, and results of one of these current-washers, based mainly on the plant at No. 2 Slope, Pratt Mines, Alabama. The coal is mined from the well-known Pratt seam, having here an average thickness of 3 feet 6 inches. It has distinct cleavage-planes, and breaks in cuboidal lumps; is bright black in color, firm in structure, and air-slacks only after considerable exposure. It burns freely, leaving a gray or buff-colored ash. The lump- and nut-coals are used for domestic and steampurposes (chiefly, however, for locomotive firing), and the slack for making coke. The specific gravity is 1.272. Analyses of Pratt Coal. I. 11. 111. IV. Min. Resources Authority. Phillips. McCalley. of U. s.,1892. Lupton. Fixed carbon,. . 67.90 61.600 64.30 63.82 Volatile material,.. 29.80 31.480 32.08 31.85 Moisture,.,...... 1.508 1.07 1.02 Ash,.... 2.30 5.416 2.08 3.31 Sulphur,. .. 0.83 0.918 0.47 0.70
Citation

APA: J. J. Ormsbee  (1896)  Florida Paper - Notes on a Southern Coal-Washing Plant (see Discussion p. 990)

MLA: J. J. Ormsbee Florida Paper - Notes on a Southern Coal-Washing Plant (see Discussion p. 990). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1896.

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