Oil Sand Reaction to Cable Shovel Motion

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Tim Grain Joseph
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
8
File Size:
728 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 2002

Abstract

This paper considers the duty cycle of an electric cable shovel and correlations with measured passive seismic responses of the underfoot oil sand material in-pit. It has been observed that the cyclic activity during operation of any shovel in the oil sands environment causes the material to deteriorate and provide a less than ideal footing for this large item of equipment, whose dead weight approaches 1500 tons with a footprint of merely 75 square yards. Consequences are manifest in the form of carbody and side frame cracks, and associated downtime, maintenance activity, cost, and subsequent loss of availability. The objective of these considerations, as part of the Oil sands Equipment Interaction Program (OsEIP); currently a joint venture between Syncrude Canada Ltd., JPi Ltd., Caterpillar Inc., P&H MinePro and the University of Alberta; is to identify and provide feedback to the manufacturer and end user adverse shovel - ground conditions. This would enable the manufacturer to incorporate greater knowledge into the design process and the end user to direct operations in an enhanced proactive maintenance stance.
Citation

APA: Tim Grain Joseph  (2002)  Oil Sand Reaction to Cable Shovel Motion

MLA: Tim Grain Joseph Oil Sand Reaction to Cable Shovel Motion. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2002.

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