Handling Timber at Normetal

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
L. S. Brooks
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
3
File Size:
1751 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1956

Abstract

TIMBER HANDLING presents a problem for any mine where appreciable amounts are used. This problem is accentuated where the shaft compartments are too small to allow a loaded timber truck to be lowered in the mine cage. When Normetal Mining Corporation, Limited, found it necessary to resort to square-set mining it faced this problem of getting large quantities of timber down a shaft that was also required for hoisting ore. A 'timber car' that could be suspended under the cage was developed to overcome this difficulty. Production started at the Normetal mine in 1937, at the rate of 250 tons per day. In 1938 a winze, known as No. 3 shaft, was sunk from the 800-foot level ?to the 1,385-foot level. This was later raised to surface and then deepened to 3,275 feet in three stages and became the main production shaft. The portion of the mine below the 3,070-foot level is serviced by a winze, locally referred to as No. 4 shaft, which has been developed for stoping down to the 3,990-foot level and which has been deepened to the 5,365-foot level. No. 3 shaft has two hoisting compartments, each 4 ft. 6 in. by 5 ft. 0 in. inside the timbers, through which the ?ore must be hoisted and timber and supplies lowered.
Citation

APA: L. S. Brooks  (1956)  Handling Timber at Normetal

MLA: L. S. Brooks Handling Timber at Normetal. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1956.

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