German Bucket Wheel Excavators and Belt Conveyors

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
W. H. Wamsley
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
2
File Size:
287 KB
Publication Date:
Dec 1, 1956

Abstract

Used in combination with conveyor belt haulage, bucket wheel excavators offer unusual possibilities for low excavation and haulage costs. Originating in Germany, these machines are now in use or on order for Australia, Northern Rhodesia, the Belgian Congo, Italy, Yugoslavia, France, Belgium, Indonesia, and the Union of South Africa. A diamond mine in South Africa that has been using German bucket wheel excavators since 1928 purchased American cable-way excavators and American scraping equipment after the war. Operating cost for this equipment was double that for the bucket wheel machines operating in the same mines with crawler-mounted stackers. Machines built and operated in the U. S. are, as far as the writer knows, confined to the northern Illinois coal field, where they are used in conjunction with large shovels to strip overburden too high to be reached by the 30 to 40-yd shovels. Their long stacker belts can deposit the spoil far enough behind the coal face to avoid slides, in such a manner as to make reclaiming the land easier. These large, specialized machines are now being made by Bucyrus-Erie Co. but are not adaptable to many open pit mining situations.
Citation

APA: W. H. Wamsley  (1956)  German Bucket Wheel Excavators and Belt Conveyors

MLA: W. H. Wamsley German Bucket Wheel Excavators and Belt Conveyors. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1956.

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