Screen Frame Sizes And Scale-Up Problems And Fundamentals Of Vibrating Screen Size Selection ? A. History

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
H. C. Lautenschlaeger
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
10
File Size:
615 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1983

Abstract

Let's start with a bit of History. Before the advent of woven wire screen cloth or perforated plate as we know it today, screens or sieves, as they were called, were probably made by the Greeks or Romans around the year 150 B.C. Coarse openings were made from bamboo or other woven reeds or with holes punched in leather hides, while fine openings may have been made using hair from the long tails of horses woven with small openings. The first metallic woven wire screens were probably produced by the Germans in the 15th Century. All of these screening devices were, of course, hand operated. The first records of mechanically driven shaking screens are found in "John Smeathon's Diary of His Journey to the Low-Country" in 1775. He was the English Civil Engineer who built the famous Eddystone Light House and discovered the formula for making hydraulic cements. He described a screen the Dutch were using as a wooden frame on which woven wire was mounted. This box was inclined at an angle and hinged on the lower end. The upper or feed end was equipped with a pulley so they could raise it up, say 5" or 6", and then let it drop abruptly onto a sill or stop plate, thus jarring the material deposited on the woven wire through the openings. Material that was passed over the deck was scooped up and redeposited on the woven wire for rescreening. This was an early form of what is today known as a recirculating load.
Citation

APA: H. C. Lautenschlaeger  (1983)  Screen Frame Sizes And Scale-Up Problems And Fundamentals Of Vibrating Screen Size Selection ? A. History

MLA: H. C. Lautenschlaeger Screen Frame Sizes And Scale-Up Problems And Fundamentals Of Vibrating Screen Size Selection ? A. History. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1983.

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