Developments In The Continuous Electronic Weighing Of Solids

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Thomas P. Goslin
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
5
File Size:
894 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1958

Abstract

T e mechanization of industry to reduce labor costs and to improve product quality is affecting he scale industry as it has affected many other industries. With increased emphasis on higher production rates many operators are experiencing difficulty in overcoming production problems where weight is a factor. Unfortunately, the scale industry has not shown the development over the last twenty-five years that other instrument industries have. For centuries the balance scale has been the standard and the workhorse of most weighing operations. In recent years considerable effort has been applied to designs to make balance scales more acceptable to industries employing automatic or semi-automatic processes. For the most part the designers have not attempted to replace the basic scale but toautomate functions of material handling and human judgement. Modern dump scales, for example, will accept material from a conveyor until a preset amount of material is on the scale, At this time the scale turns off the conveyor, dumps the load of material and repeats the operation with any desired timing. These improvements have helped industry. Even the scale observer has been replaced with devices which observe the scale reading and operate on weighed objects according to their weights. In spite of' the application of automation to the material handling, the balance scale has not been completely satisfactory. One reason for this is fairly evident when one considers the construction of the scales. Inherently, they are slow devices because of the inertia of the beams. The beam scale, primarily a static measuring device, is at the best limited to slow dynamic measurements.
Citation

APA: Thomas P. Goslin  (1958)  Developments In The Continuous Electronic Weighing Of Solids

MLA: Thomas P. Goslin Developments In The Continuous Electronic Weighing Of Solids. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1958.

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