RI 2820 The Wire Saw In Slate Quarrying. Preliminary Report - Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Oliver Bowles
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
13
File Size:
5002 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1927

Abstract

Slate possesses many admirable qualities, not only as a roofing material, but for blackboards, electrical switch boards, and for various structural uses such as stair trends, floor tile, baseboards, and sanitary enclosures. The American slate industry was established manor years ago, and has made remarkable progress, particularly during the past five years. One of the chief drawbacks to more rapid expansion is the high percentage of waste which reaches 75 to 94 per cent of gross production. Much of this waste is duo to rock imperfections over which man has no control, but a careful study of tae industry by the Bureau of Mines over a period of years indicates that an undesirably large percentage of the marketable slate is wasted in the processes of quarrying and manufacture. The initial step in quarrying slate is to separate from the solid ledge masses of a size that ray be conveniently removed from the quarry. This first step entails a greater waste of material than any subsequent process, and, therefore, invites the most earnest effort toward waste reduction. Attention has consequently been directed toward possible improvements in methods of making primary cuts in the quarry floor. A study of European practice with the wire saw, together with theoretical consideration of its advantages, convinced the writer that it possessed sufficient merit to justify its use as a primary slate cutter in American quarries. No practical conclusion in this matter could be reached except by experiment. Therefore, the desirability of obtaining equipment and trying it out under actual conditions of operation was urged upon operators. While no doubt the equipment could be readily manufactured in America, it had already been developed to the point of practical use in Europe; therefore the writer urged the desirability of purchasing one completely equipped wire saw in Europe, and determining through tests whether it gave sufficient promise of success to warrant its manufacture in America.
Citation

APA: Oliver Bowles  (1927)  RI 2820 The Wire Saw In Slate Quarrying. Preliminary Report - Introduction

MLA: Oliver Bowles RI 2820 The Wire Saw In Slate Quarrying. Preliminary Report - Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1927.

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