Papers - Recent Improvements in Mining Practice on the Mesabi Range (T.P. 968, with discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Arthur E. Anderson J. Murray Riddell Grover J. Holt
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
18
File Size:
2200 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1940

Abstract

Out of the depths of each business cycle we emerge with a stimulus for greater efficiency and a realization of progress in industrial technique. The recent years have not been an exception to this rule, and in retrospect we sense that significant advances have been made in mining practices on the Mesabi Range, with emphasis on speed of production and economy of operation. A survey of such changes does not reveal anything that is fundamentally or basically new, but it is apparent that ideas and machines that have found wide application in industry elsewhere, with necessary modifications, are being put to productive use in mining iron ore. Innovations in transporting and conveying ore from the open pits stand out with greatest prominence, so that, in the main, it will be with these features that this paper will treat, in the review of progress made to this date. The late years have witnessed the development of small deposits for open-pit operation, the cleaning up of pits nearing exhaustion, and in two large operations the approach to the limit for haulage by steam locomotives, owing to grades, making it necessary to recover the ore in slopes, track benches and below the power-shovel limit by a milling and scram operation. For several years small standard-type dump trucks have been used in clean-up or scram operations within the pits, but during the season of 1936 the first effort was made to use heavy truck haulage in the transportation of stripping and iron ore. The new units in use today vary from 15 to 20 tons in capacity, and are equipped with powerful gasoline or Diesel engines and supplemented by trailers or wagons on rubber or crawler treads. The Diesel engine finds favor with most operators because of fuel economy. These units develop upward of 125 hp. in the 15-ton trucks. The speed of these trucks varies from 2 miles per hour in Pow gear to 35 in high gear. The transmission affords 12 speeds forward and 3 speeds in reverse.
Citation

APA: Arthur E. Anderson J. Murray Riddell Grover J. Holt  (1940)  Papers - Recent Improvements in Mining Practice on the Mesabi Range (T.P. 968, with discussion)

MLA: Arthur E. Anderson J. Murray Riddell Grover J. Holt Papers - Recent Improvements in Mining Practice on the Mesabi Range (T.P. 968, with discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1940.

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