Design And Construction Of Bins

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
F. Forbes
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
11
File Size:
3087 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1968

Abstract

For many years, the Machinery Division of Dravo Corporation has been designing and constructing bins and hunkers as part of overall plant facilities. We have designed bins to handle a variety of materials including coal, coke, iron ores and concentrates, sintered and pelletized ores, calcined and raw limestone, bentonite, alloys for BOF shops, and even cast iron chips from machining operations. We, along with everyone else in this business, have had our bin problems. The bins either plug, rathole, segregate, wear out, flood the discharge device, or overload it. Surprisingly, sometimes they have worked. As engineers, it has long concerned us that something as important as bin design should be so imprecise and that it has been so conspicuously avoided in research and in literature. In past years, rule-of-thumb design criteria had been to keep the sides of the bins as steep as possible and the outlets of the bin as large as possible. This criteria led to the design of bins with 600 to 700 side slopes and table feeders which were very large. Unfortunately, this meant trying to fit tall, skinny bins into a layout where minimum building height was required for obvious economic reasons. Like everyone else in the industry, we found that this design procedure was expensive and ineffective.
Citation

APA: F. Forbes  (1968)  Design And Construction Of Bins

MLA: F. Forbes Design And Construction Of Bins. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1968.

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