RI 4922 Modified Longwall Mining With A German Coal Planer (Plow) In The Pocahontas No. 4 Coal Bed, Helen, W. Va.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Wilbur A. Haley
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
28
File Size:
6505 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1952

Abstract

The demand on the nation's reserves of high-quality coals suitable for metallurgical purposes is resulting in the rapid depletion of some of the thicker coal beds. These beds are thick enough to permit the use of modern mechanized mining equipment. Many of the thin beds are not being mined at present. In limited areas where the coal is less than 36 inches thick some beds are mined by various conveyor methods. Usually, the room-and-pillar system or some modification of it is used, and often no attempt is made to extract pillars. Consequently, an appreciable quantity of a valuable resource is lost. Many steel companies and coal operators consider reserves of low-and medium-volatile coking coals to be critical, especially in areas where the thin beds are not being mined by modern mining methods. To improve recovery and to promote more-extensive mining in thin beds, methods and devices that are new to American coal mining but applicable to the mining of thin coal beds should be tried. As one of the functions of the Bituminous Coal Mining Section of the Bureau of Mines is to promote improved mining practices and efficiency in the interest of conservation, research in that line is necessary. In 1945 coal planers were observed in operation in Germany by a Bureau engineer member of Solid Fuels Mission to Germany. Planer designs and history of early developments and operations were published. In 1949 an improved planer was again studied by Bureau engineers, and its adaptability to certain conditions in the United States, especially thin beds of friable coal, was considered practicable. After the war the planer was improved, in design and for several years has been operating successfully in the Ruhr. Because of the conviction that the device would be successful, both from the standpoint of conservation and operational prodl1ctivity, under certain conditions in the United States, the Bureau of Mines, through the Bituminous Coal Mining Section, entered into a cooperative agreement with the Coal Division of Eastern Gas & Fuel Associates and Mining Progress, Inc. The purpose of the agreement was to conduct an experiment in modified longwall mining, using a new-type German-built coal plow or planer, known as the Loebbe Habel, supplied by Mining Progress, Inc. The experiment was made to determine if this type of mining equipment operated on a longwall face could be adapted to some of the thinner American coal beds. Such an experiment also would afford many opportunities to study the possibilities and principles of this type of equipment as well as the many factors involved in the mechanical mining of a longwall face.
Citation

APA: Wilbur A. Haley  (1952)  RI 4922 Modified Longwall Mining With A German Coal Planer (Plow) In The Pocahontas No. 4 Coal Bed, Helen, W. Va.

MLA: Wilbur A. Haley RI 4922 Modified Longwall Mining With A German Coal Planer (Plow) In The Pocahontas No. 4 Coal Bed, Helen, W. Va.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1952.

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