IC 6937 Mining And Milling Methods And Costs At The Glass-Sand Plant Of P. J. Weisel, Inc., Corona, Calif. ? Introduction

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 24
- File Size:
- 8924 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1937
Abstract
This paper is one of a series being prepared by the United states Bureau of Mines describing mining and milling methods and costs at industrial mineral plants throughout the United states. These papers are designed to disseminate technical information regarding the methods and equipment used. The cost tabulations represent operating expenditures only and not total production costs. It is recognized that publication of total production costs might, in many instances, cause embarrassment to individual producers as well as to the industry as a whole. On the other hand, operating costs are essential to the technical discussion and study of the methods employed. The attention' of the reader? is specifically called to this differentiation in order that no misunderstanding of the scope of the cost tabulations shall ensue. P. J. Weisel, Inc., with office at La Habra and plant at Corona, Calif., is the only local company that produces sand for the Los Angeles glass factories, although silica sand for other purposes is produced in other parts of southern California and the adjacent portions of Nevada. The deposit at Corona consists of coarse sand imbedded in a whitish clay and differs greatly from the other deposits, which are fine-grained sandstone that must be crushed before it can be screened and washed. The preparation of Corona sand has to be thorough and includes grinding in tube mills, repeated washing and rinsing, removal of dust by air separation, and magnetic separation of iron and other minerals. This requires a plant with a complicated flow sheet. The first plant built did not make a. satisfactory glass sand, and many additions and changes were necessary. It is thought that the present flow sheet will remain substantially unchanged until a new plant is built. The design of a new plant would be simpler, but the process would be the same.
Citation
APA:
(1937) IC 6937 Mining And Milling Methods And Costs At The Glass-Sand Plant Of P. J. Weisel, Inc., Corona, Calif. ? IntroductionMLA: IC 6937 Mining And Milling Methods And Costs At The Glass-Sand Plant Of P. J. Weisel, Inc., Corona, Calif. ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1937.