Hoisting - Latest Developments in Mine Hoisting

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
H. W. Dow
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
6
File Size:
630 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1946

Abstract

Quite early in the beginning of the present century, hoisting equipment underwent a radical change, when electric motors were applied to furnish the power in place of steam engines. Naturally, in the beginning, motors were not employed for large hoists: most of them were small single-drum hoists for which the motor ran continuously and the drum was clutched in for hoisting by various methods, and the down-going trips were made on the brake. In 1911 the Nordberg Manufacturing Co. of Milwaukee built for the first time a double-drum hoist powered with a first-motion direct-current motor (Fig. I). This hoist embodied many of the features that are used on larger hoists today. In the early development of motor-driven hoists a more or less natural mis- take was generally made, which only recently is being corrected. Because the electric motor has a higher speed than the steam engine, mining people in general accepted, without question, the use of small-diameter drums and the resultant finding of the rope in multiple layers, which was not at that time, the general practice on first-motion steam hoists. Small-diameter drums can usually be driven by a motor through a single reduction of gears even with relatively high motor speed, therefore the complete equipment could be obtained with a lower first cost.
Citation

APA: H. W. Dow  (1946)  Hoisting - Latest Developments in Mine Hoisting

MLA: H. W. Dow Hoisting - Latest Developments in Mine Hoisting. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1946.

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