Hamersley's Dry Ball-Mill Grinding Circuit Exceeds Expectations

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
R. J. Cornelius W. Callender S. Terry
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
4
File Size:
142 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 7, 1969

Abstract

When a dry ball-mill grinding circuit was in- stalled at the pellet plant of Hamersley Iron Pty. Ltd., it was something of a pioneering venture, since this was one of the first instances where such a circuit had been applied to iron ore on a major scale. The Hamersley pellet plant is located in Dampier on the coast of Western Australia. The feed for it consists of -8mm fines produced as a screened product at the Mt. Tom Price mine 186 miles inland from Dampier. It was these fines that encouraged the choice of a dry grinding facility for the plant. At the outset, tests had shown that the fines could not be filtered satisfactorily with a wet grinding system. At the pelletizing plant, the fines are stockpiled, reclaimed, dry ground in ball mills, formed into pellets on balling discs, hardened on an indurating line, and stockpiled for shipment overseas. These operations are shown in Fig. 1.
Citation

APA: R. J. Cornelius W. Callender S. Terry  (1969)  Hamersley's Dry Ball-Mill Grinding Circuit Exceeds Expectations

MLA: R. J. Cornelius W. Callender S. Terry Hamersley's Dry Ball-Mill Grinding Circuit Exceeds Expectations. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1969.

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