Grinding Improvements at Mineral Park

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
J. T. Winkelmann
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
3
File Size:
238 KB
Publication Date:
Feb 23, 2014

Abstract

The Mineral Park Mine is an open pit copper-molybdenum mine located in northwestern Arizona, approximately twenty miles northwest of Kingman, Arizona. The concentrating facility has been regarded, with the expansion in 2011, as a plant capable of treating fifty thousand short tons of feed per day for the mixture of supergene and hypogene ores available. The grinding circuit consists of two 32? x 14? SAG mills and four 20? x 28? ball mills. As ores became harder with greater depth in the adjacent pit areas, however, the SAG mills became severely throughput limited. The traditional treatment for similar properties is the installation of a recycle pebble crushing circuit. Because the cost of such an installation is quite elevated, and preliminary testing and research was inconclusive regarding the predicted throughput increases, management and technical personnel set out to find another solution to the problem. The result entailed a redesign of SAG lifters/liners and a nearly unique circuit change which was, at best, a difficult step that defied current grinding logic. This paper describes these changes, events leading up to them, and the results.
Citation

APA: J. T. Winkelmann  (2014)  Grinding Improvements at Mineral Park

MLA: J. T. Winkelmann Grinding Improvements at Mineral Park. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2014.

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