New York Paper - Electric Power Installation at El Tigre, Sonora, Mexico

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 182 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1914
Abstract
The Tigre Mining Co. of Mexico, owned by the Lucky Tiger Combination Gold Mining Co. of Kansas City, decided early in 1910 to enlarge its mill, which consisted of a concentrator milling 3,000 tons of ore per month. The enlarged plant was designed to crush and concentrate 6,000 of ore and to cyanide 7,500 tons per month. The extra tonnage cyanided was to be obtained from tailings which were stored below the old mill. Power was supplied to the old mill from four boilers; a 150-h-p. Corliss engine and two Weber 60-h-p. gas-engines using producer-gas made from charcoal. The total horse-power required, including 60 h-p. used for machine-drills in the mine, was approximately 275. Cord-wood cost $4.32 per cord, 8 by 4 by 3 ft., and charcoal $15 per ton. The fuel supply in the surrounding country was approaching exhaustion; more than 150 mules and 50 men were engaged in cutting and transporting this fuel, and the unsettled political conditions in Sonora were such that it would be practically impossible to keep an organization of this kind together. The price of fuel was steadily rising and at times it became almost impossible to get sufficient fuel to operate. It was estimated that the enlarged plant, together with the mine, would require 750 h-p., as follows: Horse-Power. Old mill, which was left unchanged,..............180 New concentrator,.......................90 Cyanide-plant,........................380 Mine and other requirements,................. 100 Total,........•..................750 In a study of the best manner to obtain power the following alternative propositions were considered:
Citation
APA:
(1914) New York Paper - Electric Power Installation at El Tigre, Sonora, MexicoMLA: New York Paper - Electric Power Installation at El Tigre, Sonora, Mexico. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1914.