Sand Processing

Innovation drives uptime, higher wear liner life

Located 140km north-west of São Paulo, Brazil’s largest city, Minermix Quarry was among the first sites in the world to install one of Metso’s new MX cone crushers, with its innovative multi-action crushing technology. The installation was part of a multi-site pre-launch field trial of Metso’s latest crusher design. Since commissioning the new machine in January 2016, Minermix says the MX has significantly improved plant performance.

Minermix is the newest of three quarries owned and operated by Extrabase Mineração, the quarry material arm of Brazil’s large civil construction company Grupo Base. Located in the small city of Capivari, in the state of São Paulo, the facility has delivered a nominal production rate of 200,000 tonnes per month for the past seven years.

The quarry’s process includes primary, secondary and tertiary crushing. With a single stockpile – unlike the company’s other quarries, which have two stockpiles each – the Minermix Capivari facility needed to boost its production.

At the same time, Minermix wanted to reduce the presence of rock dust (fines) in its production of sand from gravel. Concrete plants primarily use the company’s manufactured sand, where the excessive presence of fines poses a significant problem. Minermix also wanted to ensure the best possible product tolerances, but was constantly challenged with the need to adjust its equipment to maintain production quality. In the company’s opinion, the operation could have been more productive and required fewer equipment adjustments by its operational staff.

PRODUCTIVITY RISES

Minermix’s crushing plant is fed with basalt from a site about 1km from the processing facility. The plant’s primary crushing stage employs a Metso Nordberg C125 jaw crusher, followed by secondary crushing via a Nordberg HP400 cone crusher. Material requiring further processing is crushed in two parallel tertiary crushing stages.

Until January 2016, this job was performed by two 298kW Metso HP4 cone crushers that were installed when the quarry was commissioned in 2010.

{{image2-a:r-w:200}}The company replaced one of these crushers with a new 298kW MX4 multi-action cone crusher, which now works alongside the remaining, original HP4.

Minermix’s supervisor José Nilson says the MX4 was installed and commissioned with extensive support from Metso, which included comprehensive operator training.

He said since its start-up, the new machine has delivered a 20 per cent increase in productivity. Nilson believes further gains are possible by fine-tuning the machine’s operation. In his opinion, overall productivity may improve by as much as 30 per cent.

Nilson mainly credits these improvements to the fact the crusher can be adjusted while operating at full load without the need to shut down, as well as its ability to utilise maximum power.

“The equipment reaches 95 per cent and, when it gets to peak production, the equipment itself makes the adjustments to balance production,” he said.

The new crusher has also reduced rock dust production by between five and 10 per cent. “It may not seem like much, but this reduction has a notable bearing and impact on daily production,” Nilson added.

MORE UPTIME

The MX cone crusher’s operation is based on patented multi-action technology that automatically optimises crusher operation. The machine can simultaneously adjust its setting, with a rotating bowl above its cavity and a hydraulic piston inside the machine’s fixed shaft. Dynamic setting adjustments can be made when the crusher is operating under full load conditions, without the need to stop production.

Both rotating bowl and piston adjustments are fully automated, so no human intervention is required. The combination of the crusher’s optimised crushing motion and multi-action technology results in extended wear part life, leading to longer intervals between maintenance and higher production rates.

“The MX4 works throughout the day, automatically adjusting its opening/setting or power to our specifications,” Nilson said.

He notes the MX4’s automation has improved overall operation.

“The operator turns on the equipment with a single touch of the crusher’s automation panel, which also allows the machine’s operation to be monitored throughout the day and gives us a final report when the equipment is turned off,” he explained.

On a weekly basis, the MX4 crusher is calibrated by initiating an automated procedure that takes five minutes at most. Calibration determines the degree of wear in wear parts and adjusts machine settings accordingly.

This assessment also enables the correction of any parameters that are not aligned with what has been pre-established by Minermix. Wear part replacement is performed after about 1200 hours of operation, which is more than one-third better than before. The company says the MX’s wear liner life is at least 30 per cent higher than traditional cone crushers.

The MX4 had a global launch at CONEXPO-CON/AGG in Las Vegas in March this year. Metso launched the MX4 in the Australian market at the end of May. 

Source: Metso

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