OFR-37-90 Design, Fabrication, And Testing Of A Bidirectional Auger

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
O. Llewellyn Jack
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
147
File Size:
50812 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1983

Abstract

From September 1978 to December 1983, ESD Corporation (formerly a Division of FMC Corporation) undertook the development and testing of a bidirectional auger under contract with the U.S. Department of Energy. Underground testing began in August 1981 at Peabody Coal Company's Marissa Mine near Marissa, Illinois. The auger was developed to increase mine production and coal recovery without increasing land subsidence. It bored 4-foot-diameter by 10-foot-deep holes into pillars on 7-foot centers (each hole recovering 5 tons). All operating during this test was performed by maintenance personnel with the goal of finding ways to increase the machine potential. The maximum excavation rate achieved was 1.4 tons per minute. It was concluded that the concept of drilling short holes to extract coal from underground pillars without surface subsidence was practicable with a wheel mounted auger, but that more power was desirable for this mine, and that the hydraulically driven augering system that provided experimental versatility was not sufficiently reliable for production use.
Citation

APA: O. Llewellyn Jack  (1983)  OFR-37-90 Design, Fabrication, And Testing Of A Bidirectional Auger

MLA: O. Llewellyn Jack OFR-37-90 Design, Fabrication, And Testing Of A Bidirectional Auger. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1983.

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