History of the Flotation Process at Inspiration (8dce8c3c-eb14-4c6a-b07f-d0a673dc3ec9)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 310 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 10, 1916
Abstract
DAVID COLE, EL PASO, TEXAS (communication to the Secretary*).-I have read with great interest Dr. Gahl's painstaking paper giving us the details of development of flotation at Inspiration, and it seems to me that he has covered the ground so completely that there is little to discuss or criticize in connection with his subject. While it was in operation, the test mill in which the campaign was carried on was the Mecca of mill men and metallurgists. There was much to interest students of milling methods in addition to the flotation experiments, and readers of Dr. Gahl's paper will miss the information they hoped to get when the "pilot" mill results were. finally compiled, and I hope that the following remarks outlining from a distance some of the things that happened there will bring forth the rest of the story of the performances recorded in these important experiments. Prior to the use of flotation methods in concentration it had long been recognized that the "unavoidable" losses of sulphides were in the slime which is inevitably produced in the grinding operations required to free the minerals to be separated. Classifying the feed prior to its final stage of treatment had long been in style in milling. This assisted the sand-handling machines and resulted in lowering the tailings made by them, but at the expense of the slime-handling department; and while little was expected of the latter, the wisdom of complicating the process by hydraulic classification was being seriously questioned. Indeed, at the
Citation
APA:
(1916) History of the Flotation Process at Inspiration (8dce8c3c-eb14-4c6a-b07f-d0a673dc3ec9)MLA: History of the Flotation Process at Inspiration (8dce8c3c-eb14-4c6a-b07f-d0a673dc3ec9). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1916.