Grinding Magnetic Taconite In Rod Mills - At Reserve Mining Co.'s Babbitt Plant, Using A Longer Rod Mill Has Solved A Problem.

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
E. M. Furness A. S. Henderson
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
2
File Size:
176 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 12, 1957

Abstract

ORIGINALLY the Babbitt experimental plant grinding circuit consisted of one rod mill 10 ½ ft diam by 12 ft long in open circuit followed by two ball mills 10 ½ ft diam* 12 ft long in parallel circuit. Shortly after operations commenced it was apparent that the rod mill could not function satisfactorily at the required 125 gross tons of ore per hr. Attempts to operate at this rate produced: 1) excessive tramp material over rod mill trommel screen which could not be handled in this open circuit and 2) excess build-up of coarse ore in the ball mill circuits because of inadequate rod mill grinding. Since Reserve Mining Co. ore must be ground to 85 pct -325 mesh to produce a satisfactory iron concentrate, an efficient and controlled grinding circuit is highly important. The first step in trying to resolve this grinding problem was to determine which unit of the circuit was actually in trouble and to what extent. A series of tests conducted at a lower tonnage rate of rod mill feed indicated that one ball mill could grind satisfactorily at rates up to 70 gross tons of rod mill feed per hr.
Citation

APA: E. M. Furness A. S. Henderson  (1957)  Grinding Magnetic Taconite In Rod Mills - At Reserve Mining Co.'s Babbitt Plant, Using A Longer Rod Mill Has Solved A Problem.

MLA: E. M. Furness A. S. Henderson Grinding Magnetic Taconite In Rod Mills - At Reserve Mining Co.'s Babbitt Plant, Using A Longer Rod Mill Has Solved A Problem.. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1957.

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