RI 6276 Hydraulic Coal Mining Research - Tests In A Steeply Pitching Coalbed, Roslyn, Wash.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Thomas M. Nasiatka
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
21
File Size:
8366 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1963

Abstract

Tests with a high-pressure water jet were conducted in the steeply pitching Roslyn No. 5 bituminous coalbed in the Roslyn No. 9 mine, Roslyn, Wash., to determine the feasibility of extracting coal from pillars and from a solid coal face in development without drilling and blasting. During pillar mining, using a hand-held monitor, the best results were obtained with a 0.150-inch- diameter nozzle, a water pressure of 3,500 psi, and a flow rate of 38.5 gpm.3 The rate of mining and productivity were 0.74 ton per minute and 16.6 tons per man-shift, respectively. During development mining, using a monitor mounted on a roof jack, the best results were obtained with a 0.148-inch-diameter nozzle, a water pressure of 4,500 psi, and a flow rate of 40.0 gpm. In one section of the mine where the coal was relatively hard, the rate .of mining and productivity were 0.10 ton per minute and 5.7 tons per man-shift, respectively in another section of the mine where the coal was relatively soft, the rate of mining and productivity were 0.51 ton per minute and 8.3 tons per man-shift, respectively. The tests showed that hydraulic mining methods were more productive than conventional mining methods in pillar mining. In development the productivity of hydraulic mining depended primarily upon the coal hardness. Compared with conventional methods, hydraulic mining methods were less productive where the coal was relatively hard and equally as productive where the coal was relatively soft.
Citation

APA: Thomas M. Nasiatka  (1963)  RI 6276 Hydraulic Coal Mining Research - Tests In A Steeply Pitching Coalbed, Roslyn, Wash.

MLA: Thomas M. Nasiatka RI 6276 Hydraulic Coal Mining Research - Tests In A Steeply Pitching Coalbed, Roslyn, Wash.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1963.

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