Reliability analysis as a tool for surface mining equipment evaluation and selection

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
L. K. Daneshmend M. G. Lipsett J. Wong
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
5
File Size:
275 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2000

Abstract

"Current trends of increased size, complexity, and automation of surface mining equipment necessitate more comprehensive and objective techniques for equipment comparison and selection. The field of reliability analysis provides tools to generate quantitative bases for maintenance and reliability aspects of such comparisons. Results from statistical analyses of failure and repair time data are used to perform the comparison. A case study is presented which analyzes five machines of two different technologies and three different designs.IntroductionThe surface mining industry is currently faced with a rapid evolution in production equipment. The more obvious trend in this evolution is the steady introduction of even larger machines. Parallel, and complementary, to this increase in size is the introduction or adaptation of new technologies. Together, these two trends result in new surface mining equipment designs; these designs are often more complex and may feature technologies that have yet to be proven for the application or at the scale they are now fielded.The prospect of significant automation of open pit equipment is also bound to add complexity to future equipment designs. Semi-automated features, such as drilling controllers (Aquila, 2000), have already been commercialized. Fully autonomous haul trucks have been demonstrated in open pit mines (Jackson and Zoschke, 2000). Design concepts for comprehensive teleoperation of open pit operations have been formulated (Lipsett, 1998).With this rapid availability and deployment of new technology and equipment, managers and maintainers are faced with a multitude of decisions regarding what equipment to acquire and what maintenance strategies to implement. In light of this evolution in mining equipment, it is necessary to develop better methods for making equipment management decisions (Dessureault et al., 1999; Paraszczak, 1999). The incentive for development of such techniques is that a large portion of an open pit mine’s operating cost is maintenance related, as shown in Table 1."
Citation

APA: L. K. Daneshmend M. G. Lipsett J. Wong  (2000)  Reliability analysis as a tool for surface mining equipment evaluation and selection

MLA: L. K. Daneshmend M. G. Lipsett J. Wong Reliability analysis as a tool for surface mining equipment evaluation and selection. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2000.

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