Effects of Maintenance Practice on Wire Rope Life in Dragline Applications

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
W. E. Anderson T. M. Brady
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
5
File Size:
329 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 11, 1979

Abstract

As part of a larger study to identify factors influencing the practical operating life of wire rope used on large draglines in surface coal mining, field trips to operating surface coal mines were made during late 1975. Wire rope performance information was obtained from personnel at 13 mine sites west of the Appalachians. Seventeen pieces of equipment, utilizing bucket sizes ranging from 30 to 220 cu yd (23 to 168 m), were documented. Draglines at large US surface coal mines can be represented as 120 machines having 60-cu yd (46-m3) buckets, moving 1.8 x 10[9] cu yd (1.4 X 10[9] m3) of overburden during 6650 hours of productive availability per year. Based on the limited field study, the calculated downtime resulting from rope-related causes averages 105.6 hours per year for each typical 60-cu yd (43-m3) dragline. The total loss in production from this source alone is thereby estimated at about 25 X 10[6] cu yd (19 X 10[6] m3) annually.
Citation

APA: W. E. Anderson T. M. Brady  (1979)  Effects of Maintenance Practice on Wire Rope Life in Dragline Applications

MLA: W. E. Anderson T. M. Brady Effects of Maintenance Practice on Wire Rope Life in Dragline Applications. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1979.

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