San Francisco Paper - The British Columbia Copper Co.’s Smelter, Greenwood, B. C.

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Frederic K. Bunton
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
15
File Size:
567 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1916

Abstract

The smelting plant of the British Columbia Copper Co. at Greenwood, B. C., now closed because of the decline in the price of copper due.to the European war, is of special interest to metallurgists for several reasons. It was successfully smelting in blast furnaces the lowest grade copper ore of all plants in America. In order to do so, it had to run at very hig~; efficiency, which necessarily required a large tonnage per square foot of hearth area, together with the minimum amount of labor and other costs. The furnaces smelted daily 2,250 tons of ore (6.62 tons per sq. ft. of hearth area), carrying 0.85 per cent. of copper, at a smelting cost of 81.18 per ton. The entire plant required 130 men to operate it and keep up repairs, showing a labor efficiency of about 17.5 Dons per man per day. In the present paper, the method of obtaining these results is shown. Most of the information contained in this description I obtained as Assistant Superintendent, during the two years preceding the present shutdown. Other sources of information to which I am indebted are: The British Columbia Copper Co., Ltd., by ALfred W. G. Wilson, in The Copper Smelting Industry of Canada; Greenwood Smelting Worlrs, by J. E. McAllister, Engineering and Mining Journal, vol. xci, pp. 1011 to 1015 (May 20, 1911); and Description of the Copper Smelter of The British Columbia Copper Co., by W. L. Bell, in Transactions of the Canadian Mining Institute, vol. xvi, pp. 151 to 154 (1913). II. Location and Connections The smelter of this company is about half a mile south of GreenGood, in the Boundary district of British Columbia, on the Columbia & Westerg branch of the Canadian Pacific Railway. It was originally built in 1900 by Paul Johnson, to handle 600 tons of ore a day in two small furnaces of 300 tons capacity; but in 1907 the old furnaces were torn out, the plant was remodeled, and three blast furnaces, 48 by 240 in. at) the tuyéres, were installed. In 1910, two of these were enlarged to 51 by
Citation

APA: Frederic K. Bunton  (1916)  San Francisco Paper - The British Columbia Copper Co.’s Smelter, Greenwood, B. C.

MLA: Frederic K. Bunton San Francisco Paper - The British Columbia Copper Co.’s Smelter, Greenwood, B. C.. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1916.

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