Bethlehem Paper - Screens for Sizing

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Ernest A. Hersam
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
23
File Size:
868 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1907

Abstract

Accurate ore-sizing with screens is drawing attention to certain details that now, more than ever before, require attention. There are many tests that must be preceded by careful sizing. The assayer often could profit by a more careful selection of screens. In milling, more attention is given the slimes produced. Cement-manufacturers are pulverizing and screening finer than they formerly did, and others are reducing materials to fine sizes at high cost, with screens used to govern the fineness of the pulverized product. Fine screens are expensive, easily injured by misuse, are carried in stock sparingly by most dealers, and are handled often by those who know little about them except their designated number. More attention, on the whole, needs be given the actual size of the mesh-openings, and less emphasis placed upon any custom or conventionality in numbering. An effort to classify wire screens, in this respect, leads at once into computations, where one is confronted with details of sizes and standards, of different wires, different gauges, and different customs. There is always uncertainty about the exact working-size of a screen until one gives the matter special attention, and devotes more time to it than its simplicity seems to demand. To know only the number is not sufficient for all uses. Often, in sets, superfluous sizes are used; and sizes are omitted that are of critical importance. In wire screens, the use of different standard sizes of wire makes important differences in dimensions that must be taken into account. The dealer usually grades screens by the number of openings per linear dimensions, regardless of the size of the openings or of the wire. Certain 100-mesh screens in use are found, by measurement, to be actually coarser than others of 90-mesh, a result which is due, of course, to the use of larger
Citation

APA: Ernest A. Hersam  (1907)  Bethlehem Paper - Screens for Sizing

MLA: Ernest A. Hersam Bethlehem Paper - Screens for Sizing. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1907.

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