An evaluation of the equipment used in South Africa for the bord-and-pillar mining of thin coal seams

The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Organization:
The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
5
File Size:
403 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1984

Abstract

It is suggested that an increase in the production from thin coal seams in South Africa is necessary, and that a substantial amount of any increase will be mined by the bord-and-pillar method. For the purpose of this study, a thin coal seam was regarded as any seam 1,5 m thick or less to the minimum thickness at which mechanized equipment can operate in bord-and-pillar workings. The equipment being utilized in thin-seam bord-and-pillar layouts includes conventional equipment, load-hauldump cars (scoops), and drum-type and Fairchild-Wilcox continuous miners. Comparisons are made of these types of equipment for bord-and-pillar mining at various seam thicknesses within the thin-seam range. The evaluations involved production rates and the cost of extraction for South African conditions, use being made of an existing computer modelling technique in the generation of production rates. The indications are that, for seam thicknesses greater than 0,9 m, drum-type continuous miners utilizing continuous haulage are the most productive and cost-effective equipment at present operating in thin-seam bord-and- pillar workings. Where seams thinner than 0,9 m are to be exploited, Fairchild-Wilcox continuous miners, particularly the Mark 22, produce the most coal at the lowest cost.
Citation

APA:  (1984)  An evaluation of the equipment used in South Africa for the bord-and-pillar mining of thin coal seams

MLA: An evaluation of the equipment used in South Africa for the bord-and-pillar mining of thin coal seams. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1984.

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