The use of face conveyors in gold mines

The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
N. C. Joughin A. C. Buckmaster
Organization:
The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
10
File Size:
1772 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 2, 1976

Abstract

The use of face conveyors in gold mines by N. C. JOUGHIN. B.Sc. (Eng.). Ph.D. (Wits) (Member) and A. C. BUCKMASTER; M.A. (Cantab.) A mechanized stope-cleaning system has been developed around an armoured face conveyor, which was tested on the surface and in two underground trials. In the second underground trial, an average face advance of 8,5 m per month was obtained with a labour productivity of 27 ca/worker/month on a two-shift blast cycle. Two new face cleaning systems have been built, each incorporating an armoured face conveyor, a loading plough, a collapsible self-advancing barricade, and an integral roof-support system. These are about to be tested. A new type of reciprocating flight conveyor is being developed for stope use. This is cheaper, lighter, and more compact, and exhibits better wear characteristics, than an armoured face conveyor. In the early stages of the trials, this conveyor frequently achieved a singleshift blast cycle. It should be possible to achieve face advances of up to 40 ca/worker/month with a consistent one-shift blast cycle. The use of drill rigs and a self-advancing roof-support system would improve the productivity to over 50 ca/worker/month.
Citation

APA: N. C. Joughin A. C. Buckmaster  (1976)  The use of face conveyors in gold mines

MLA: N. C. Joughin A. C. Buckmaster The use of face conveyors in gold mines. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1976.

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