Papers - Improvements in Fine Grinding and Classification at the Hollinger Consolidated Gold Mines Ltd. (T. P. 1088)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
H. W. Hitzrot
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
13
File Size:
656 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1939

Abstract

The new 4800-ton fine-grinding plant at the Hollinger Consolidated Gold Mines property at Timmins, in the Porcupine district of northern Ontario, went into operation in November 1937, and represents the culmination of an experimental program. The plant is a moderately low rectangular building of hollow tile on a steel frame, large enough to house four 7 by 15-ft. ball mills, with a 12 by 27-ft. classifier beside each mill. At one end is space for the addition of another mill and classifier or a mill and classifier for the regrinding of table concentrates. This regrinding is now done in the old grinding department of the main mill building. Also within the new building are the four 6-in. sand pumps for lifting the product from the low-dis-charge ball mills up to the classifier feed launders and the containers and appurtenances of a complete dust-collecting system. Together with the usual overhead crane, these constitute the major units of equipment within the new plant. The location is at the lower end of the main mill buildings toward the old tailings pond, now so neatly leveled off and sodded to rival the very best of our own W.P.A. projects. Close by the new grinding plant is a large dome-shaped structure—the new fine-ore bin designed and built by Mr. Longmore and the Hollinger milling and engineering staffs. There are four separate automatically loaded inclined belt conveyors leading up from the bottom of the bin to the grinding plant. Each belt is equipped with a recording weightometer, in the grinding building. The whole structure and the machinery within it give the impression of permanence and a carefully integrated design with close attention to details, giving the operators every advantage for consistently good work. The many ideas and opinions behind this achievement were all ably organized and executed by the Hollinger milling and engineering staffs, and not a few were directly initiated by them. Excellent cooperation was afforded by the Hollinger staff to the engineers helping to conduct
Citation

APA: H. W. Hitzrot  (1939)  Papers - Improvements in Fine Grinding and Classification at the Hollinger Consolidated Gold Mines Ltd. (T. P. 1088)

MLA: H. W. Hitzrot Papers - Improvements in Fine Grinding and Classification at the Hollinger Consolidated Gold Mines Ltd. (T. P. 1088). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1939.

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