Six Foot-Diameter Raise Boring At The Mountain Con Mine ? Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
O. R. Swendseid
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
8
File Size:
1220 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1967

Abstract

The Mountain Con mine is a relatively old, deep mine located in Butte, Montana. Operations at this property through the present shaft were started before the turn of the century. As mining progressed to depth, increasing demand for ventilation facilities and changing mining conditions made it convenient to convert some nearby shafts to airways. The fact that these openings had not been originally planned for use as airways made it necessary in some instances to utilize long and inefficient already-estab¬lished entries to service working areas. This situation existed in the Lexington fresh air system. The Lexington system consists of a vertical, 3-compartment shaft extending from surface to the 3200 level and a series of 2-compartment air raises and old horizontal-haulage openings extending into a mining area several thousand feet west of the Lexington shaft between the 3900 level and the 4200 level. Because of restrictions and high resistance in the portion of the system between the bottom of the Lexington shaft on the 3200 and the mining area on the 3900, the capacity of this system is only 85,000 cubic feet of air per minute. It was calculated that the capacity of the system could be in¬creased to meet the demands of the current mining program in this section of the mine by utilizing a single, straight, horizontal air course on the 3200 and by driving an inclined air raise 740 feet long between the 3900 and the 3200.
Citation

APA: O. R. Swendseid  (1967)  Six Foot-Diameter Raise Boring At The Mountain Con Mine ? Introduction

MLA: O. R. Swendseid Six Foot-Diameter Raise Boring At The Mountain Con Mine ? Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1967.

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