RI 4622 A Test Of Treated Timbers In A Mine At Negaunee, Mich.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
F. S. Crawford
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
10
File Size:
3928 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1950

Abstract

This report deals with the effectiveness and economy of installing mine timbers treated with preservatives in long-life service locations. Early in the present century, when mine timbers and labor were plentiful, it was not general practice to install treated timbers in such places. Because national sources of good mine timber are declining steadily, the mining industry must now conserve timber. Moreover, the cost of installing and replacing mine timbers has been rising. Therefore, even the simplest of treatments can be expected to give some return on the investment when applied to timbers that are to be installed in relatively permanent locations. Better methods of treatment will produce better returns. In a service test of maple timbers treated by the hot-and cold-bath method and installed in main haulageways of the Athens mine of the Cleveland Cliffs Iron Co., Negaunee, Mich., zinc chloride-treated timbers had an average useful life of 13.3 years; borax-treated timbers, 11.2 years; and sodium fluoride-treated timbers, 7.7 years. Untreated timbers used as controls had an average useful life of 3.8 years.
Citation

APA: F. S. Crawford  (1950)  RI 4622 A Test Of Treated Timbers In A Mine At Negaunee, Mich.

MLA: F. S. Crawford RI 4622 A Test Of Treated Timbers In A Mine At Negaunee, Mich.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1950.

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