Pneumatic Coal Cleaning (7c9ede07-f1b5-4b05-ba78-301a12da798f)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
E. C. Carris
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
40
File Size:
1980 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1943

Abstract

THE particular field of application of machines utilizing air cur¬rents as the primary separating medium is in the cleaning of the fine sizes of bituminous coal. Approximately 12,000,000 tons of bituminous coal were cleaned by air machines during 1940. They have not found any application for cleaning anthracite. Since the development and introduction of the first successful com¬mercial pneumatic oscillating machine for cleaning bituminous coal in 1916, by the Sutton, Steele and Steele Co., Dallas, Texas, and the Ameri¬can Coal Cleaning Corporation, formerly of Welch, W. Va., four other successful pneumatic coal-cleaning machines have been developed and introduced to the American coal-mining industry: 1. Peale Davis: "Pneumo-Gravity" machine, 1924. 2. Arms "Concentrator," oscillating table, 1924. 3. Heyl and Patterson oscillating table, 199.7. 4. "Stump Air-Flow," pulsating air jig, 19391. Out of these five developments only the Sutton, Steele and Steele, or American Oscillating, and the Stump Air-Flow Jig remain on the market. They are the predominating pneumatic coal-cleaning machines in use in the United States. HISTORY OF AMERICAN TYPE SEPARATOR The first successful American machine, the CJ table (Fig. 1) was developed by the Sutton, Steele and Steele Co. The SJ table was the first standard model designed specifically for the cleaning of coal. It was installed in the original Crane Creek plant, owned and operated by the American Coal Co. at McComas, West Virginia. This plant was designed by The Roberts and Schaefer Co., Chicago, Ill., working in cooperation with the American Coal Cleaning Corpora¬tion, which had taken over the patent rights and sale of the pneumatic separators. Eight machines were installed in this plant. They were known as the type SJ. They were 60 by 84 in., the short dimension being the width of
Citation

APA: E. C. Carris  (1943)  Pneumatic Coal Cleaning (7c9ede07-f1b5-4b05-ba78-301a12da798f)

MLA: E. C. Carris Pneumatic Coal Cleaning (7c9ede07-f1b5-4b05-ba78-301a12da798f). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1943.

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