Overflow Ball Mill Sizing: A Shared-Time Computer Program ? Introduction

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 21
- File Size:
- 460 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1969
Abstract
Commercial computer "time-sharing" is a new and powerful tool for the engineer. It is a system of virtually simultaneous use of a digital computer by several individuals. Access to the computer is by means of a conventional teletypewriter which transmits over the regular telephone lines to the computer which may be located any distance from the user. Complex or repetitive computations can be programmed and the speed of computation is many times that which one can do with slide rule and desk calculator. The availability of such a commercial computer "time-sharing" system offered an opportunity to transform a tedious and time-consuming task into one that requires only a few minutes. Until the work of F. C. Bond produced widely accepted mathematical statements concerning the performance of grinding mills, the selection of the proper size equipment was done by comparison with similar operating equipment. Allis-Chalmers systematized Bond's work in a bulletin published in 1963 but the calculations are laborious and the final mill selection still required comparison of the calculated power draw with the power requirements listed in equipment catalogs. This was, however, a step forward from previous procedures. This paper discusses a rapid and simple method of determining the size and power requirement of overflow ball mills. A shared-time computer program has been developed which rapidly calculates and displays the physical dimensions, power requirements, grinding media size and quantity, as well as the important correction factors used. All of these data are calculated from input information which is usually available.
Citation
APA:
(1969) Overflow Ball Mill Sizing: A Shared-Time Computer Program ? IntroductionMLA: Overflow Ball Mill Sizing: A Shared-Time Computer Program ? Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1969.