The Crawler Mounted Drifter As A Primary Blasthole Drill

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 29
- File Size:
- 4903 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1977
Abstract
The story of America's progressing standard of living is the story of machines. The automobile, the airplane and the telephone for example have made our transportation and communication systems what they are today. Even they depend in turn on another machine -- the rock drill. By making it possible to economically mine and quarry minerals in large quantities, this versatile machine supports virtually every American industry relying on the earth for its buried raw materials. And, like all machines, the rock drill's mechanical evolution was stimulated by production demands placed upon it. All percussion drills are mechanized versions of the original drilling unit -- man, Figure - illustrates a double jack team at work before the turn of the century. The man with the sledge hammer is the impact device while the man sitting is the rotation mechanism and feed motor. The first drifter drills (Figure 2) performed the same function but with increased mechanical efficiency. A piston controlled by a valve produced impact. A built-in ratcheting mechanism provided rotation and a hand-cranked screw provided feed thrust. As the industrial revolution proceeded into the twentieth century, the demand for raw materials stimulated refinements of all recovery machinery, including rock drills. As drills became heavier and more powerful, a mounting (or carrier) had to be provided to move the drill from hole to hole. This resulted in the development of the wagon drill (Figure 3). Propelled by muscle power, the wagon drill was for years the standard tool of the surface drilling industry (Figure 4). As drills penetrated faster and as labor increased in cost, the time consumed in nondrilling peripheral operations had to be
Citation
APA:
(1977) The Crawler Mounted Drifter As A Primary Blasthole DrillMLA: The Crawler Mounted Drifter As A Primary Blasthole Drill. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1977.