Mining Mirror March 2019 | Page 40

Technology and innovation Converted crawler shows its strength Throatbush wear rate has a major impact on the overall efficiency of slurry pumps. In many applications, the pump’s throatbush is the component that has the shortest life compared to the impeller and liners, with considerable variability. To address this, Weir Minerals has developed superior rotating and axial adjustment technology. Adjusting the gap between the throatbush and the impeller front shroud reduces hydraulic recirculation in the pump. This prevents localised wear on the throatbush, improves hydraulic efficiency, and lowers the total ownership cost for the operator. To avoid impacting the plant’s production, these adjustments are often performed while the pump is operating. However, this can have safety implications for individuals working at the front of the pump unit. Weir Minerals’ automated adjustment systems speed up the process, allowing for more frequent adjustments with minimal effort. When maintaining an alloy throatbush, all four bolts are adjusted at the same time to ensure even adjustment and accurate positioning, improving the wear life of the throatbush. A new 22-tonne Doosan DX225LC-5 crawler excavator has been converted into an all-terrain machine for contracts being carried out in the Wadden Sea in Germany, by the company Sven Jacobs Tief-, Garten- und Landschaftsbau, who is based in Tating (Schleswig-Holstein). The conversion of the Doosan excavator supplied by local Doosan dealer, Atlas Hamburg GmbH, was completed by OLKO-Maschinentechnik GmbH from Olfen (NRW). The main application area for the new all-terrain excavator is the approximately 11.3km-long Hindenburgdamm embankment, which connects the island of Sylt with the mainland in Germany. Around 8.1km of the Hindenburg embankment runs through the Wadden Sea. To prevent the standard Doosan 22-tonne crawler excavator from sinking into the water, a particularly low-ground pressure is required. For this purpose, Jens Mewes, from Sales at Atlas Hamburg, who has been working with the Jacobs company for four years, contacted OLKO-Maschinentechnik to carry out the conversion needed. OLKO has mounted the superstructure of the Doosan DX225LC-5 on an all-terrain undercarriage, not a standard pontoon, to ensure that the full manoeuvrability of the excavator has been maintained. Pump maintenance enhanced The DX225LC-5 crawler excavator has been converted into an all-terrain machine. Kwatani’s custom-engineered products are used in some of the world’s largest mines, and many customers have standardised on their screens to ensure lowest cost of ownership and high performance, according to general manager sales and service, Jan Schoepflin. At a local brownfield diamond expansion project, the company’s multi-slope banana screens were matched to the available plant footprint, raising throughput from 250 to 500 tonnes per hour and later breaking the mine’s tonnage record. While screening in heavy minerals is Kwatani’s stronghold, the company has also supplied various coal producers with 45 items of large screening equipment, including outsized 4.3-metre-wide units. Other recent coal-related orders included run-of-mine screens for a medium-sized coal mine in Mpumalanga. At Africa’s largest iron ore mine, the company completed two projects, renewing existing equipment with up-to-date solutions and replacing 24 items of competitor equipment. A recent turnkey solution focused on the platinum by-product chromite, where the company supplied a complete solution that included feeder, dryer, and screen to treat chromite of 45-micron size at 15 tonnes per hour. . [40] MINING MIRROR MARCH 2019 Screening across the industry Weir Minerals enhances pump maintenance with adjustment technology. www.miningmirror.co.za