OFR-75-86 Development Of A Reduced-Noise Auger Miner Cutting Head

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 193
- File Size:
- 49169 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1983
Abstract
Noise surveys conducted in underground coal mines have consistently indicated that auger mining machines subject the operator and helpers to excessive noise exposure. The machine cutting heads have been identified as the primary noise source. This report documents the research program conducted to (1) investigate the nature of the cutting head noise problem, (2) develop noise control concepts, (3) devise in-mine survivable techniques to implement the noise control concepts, and (4) build and demonstrate prototype reduced-noise auger miner cutting heads. The dynamic forces generated during coal cutting by the brittle fracture of coal are predominently low frequency. The low-frequency (less than 1500 Hz) structural response of the cutting head, therefore, determines the noise radiated by the cutting head. The most feasible methods of reducing the cutting head low-frequency response are to increase both the structural stiffness and the low-frequency damping. A technique was devised to achieve these goals. The standard plate helix was replaced by a sand-filled hollow helix of triangular cross section, and the core diameter was increased with an attendant reduction in helix depth. Extended in-mine tests demonstrated the operational capability of the reduced-noise auger cutting heads. The simple noise control concepts are valid for all continuous miner cutting heads. The sand-filled hollow helix technique, which achieved a 10 dB(A) noise reduction for the auger, can be used on any helix-bearing Cutting head.
Citation
APA:
(1983) OFR-75-86 Development Of A Reduced-Noise Auger Miner Cutting HeadMLA: OFR-75-86 Development Of A Reduced-Noise Auger Miner Cutting Head. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1983.