Milling and Concentration

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 13
- File Size:
- 731 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1935
Abstract
The Hadsel Mill. By R. G HALL (Trans, vol 112 4000 words) This mill is designed to effect the entire reduction of ores by combined crushing and grinding from mine run size to material sufficiently fine for the usual operation of flotation or cyaniding The work is begun and completed in the same machine. The machine is designed on the principal of the elevator wheel, and crushing and grinding are accomplished by dropping a mixture of ore and water upon specially placed "breaker plates" in such a manner that the resultant material passes back into the buckets of the wheel for further elevation One method of removal of the finished product is to permit an overflow of wet pulp on one side of the mill through coarse screens A recent improvement provides for the removal of a pulp by a launder part way up the path of the buckets In either case the pulp passes to a classifier, and the oversize back to the mill in the manner familiar in ball-mill practice Although hardly through the development stage, the machine has given a very good account of itself in simplification of plant, by elimination of coarse and fine crushers with consequent reduction of installation cost and power consumption As compared with the ball mill alone, there is a reduction of power consumption as well as a material reduction of grinding steel There is an increase in cost of maintenance other than grinding steel, but as the machine passes out of the development stage there is a show¬ing of reduction of costs on this item It seems probable that with further develop¬ment and strengthening of the weaker parts further improvement may be made Ball Milling. By A. M Gow, M GUGGENHEIM, A. B. CAMPBELL AND W. H COGHILL. (Tech Pub 517; also Trans, vol 112. 24,000 words) This paper outlines a new philosophy in ball milling by using power as an index of mill operation and ascertaining the effects of the set and induced variables By recognizing the amount of ore in the mill as an important induced variable and recognizing that the amount of ore in the mill depends principally on the size of the discharge trunnion, ball volume, rate of feed, and speed of mill, obstacles formerly met were surmounted When the amount of ore in the mill is dealt with intelligently and the applied work is proportional to the amount of feed, series testing, which would otherwise give a hotchpotch, gives concordant results The study of ball paths and trajectories was seen to be fruitless when it was shown that the old attrition theory for slow mill speed
Citation
APA: (1935) Milling and Concentration
MLA: Milling and Concentration. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1935.