Salt Lake Paper - Development of the Round Table at Great Falls

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 53
- File Size:
- 2460 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1915
Abstract
Page IntRodUction ................... The Round Table in Lake Superior Practice .........420 Early Use of Revolving Round Table in Butte District...... Use oF the Round Table at GREat Falls foR Sand-Slime Feed ., . The Round Table for Fine Slime........,.... Construction of Slime Plant at Great Falls..... '..... 424 Tests on Wood, Linoleum, and Cement Decks.........426 Central Feed Apron Removed ....'......... Re-treatment of Round-Table Tailing........... Determination of Conditions for Round-Table Treatment of Slimcs ... 430 Variation in Slope of Round-Table Deck........ ,... The Steel-Frame Cement-Deck Round Table ........ Tests on Cement and Canvas Dock Surfaces ..: ..... Conoidal Deck Round Tables............. Results with Sand-Slime Feed on Conoidal Deck....... Conclusions from Preliminary Tests on Conoidal and Conical Decks ... 446 Discussion of Results of Four-Day Test on Conical and Conoidal Decks . 452 Discussion of Results of Eight-Day Test.......... Qualitative Sampling of Concentrates Across Conical Deck.... Summary of Slime-Plant Practice............ Suggested Flow Sheet for Slime Classification and Treatment.... Conclusion...................467 Introduction The principal object of this paper is 60 presest, data on the development of the revolving convex round table as a concentrator for the through 0.07-mm. slimes from the ores of the Butte district, although some brief notes on the earliest recorded use of this type of concentrating table in the ore-dressing plants of the Lake Superior region and of the Butte district are also presented. The revolving convex round table belongs to the class of concentrating tables known as film-sizing. tables, these tables using the relative transporting power of a film, or thin sheet of water, as it flows over a quiet inclined surface, to separate the minerals of a sorted product. The grains of heavy mineral move down the slope of the table deck slowly, or, in some cases, not at all, after the initial force of the feed entry VOL. XLIX.—27
Citation
APA:
(1915) Salt Lake Paper - Development of the Round Table at Great FallsMLA: Salt Lake Paper - Development of the Round Table at Great Falls. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1915.