Talk:Dragline excavator
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Contents |
[edit] Removal of GEM
GEM is a 'Rope Shovel', not a dragline excavator. Compare the pictures of GEM [1] with the pictures in Steam Shovel
- Well-spotted. Details have been moved to steam shovel, replacing the information about Big Muskie which is a dragline!
- EdJogg 00:56, 3 May 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Pre-2006 Comments
Scottfisher, can you add the geographical location of Manitowok in the photo caption? Thanks! Badagnani 00:55, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
-
- Badagnani
Sure, Not a problem, I know the history of "Manny"; It came from the Nevada Test Site, then went to Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California, now at to Oakridge, Tennessee, ORNL. All are Department of Energy sites, in the USA. I think Manny is up for sale now. Regards, Scotty
[edit] Shovel vs Dragline
I believe Big Brutus is technically a "shovel", not a dragline (one lifts, the other drags). In the article, Big Brutus is referred to as a "dragline shovel". Is there such a thing?
The external link at the bottom of the article is a website that calls Big Brutus a "electric mining shovel", not a dragline.
There is no such thing as a "dragline shovel". Big Brutus is a rope shovel which is completely different from a dragline.
Mark
[edit] Caterpillar tracks versus feet
Regarding the statement:
- In all but the smallest of draglines, movement is accomplished by "walking" using feet or pontoons, as caterpillar tracks place too much pressure on the ground
What kind of feet are these that they put less pressure on the ground than caterpillar tracks? Is it even true? That GEM thing linked near the bottom of the page is pictured on caterpillar tracks. --ToobMug 12:48, 12 December 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Jargon in 'Limitations' Section
I am no expert on draglines, mining, or similar, so the following text is (a) under the wrong heading (should be 'Usage' or similar), and
(b) almost completely incomprehensible. I have identified (wikified) most of the terms I think need defining. (Note that NONE of these links has been checked for relevance!)
- Draglines have different cutting sequences. The first is the side cast method using offset benches; this involves throwing the overburden sideways onto blasted material to make a bench. The second is a key pass. This pass cuts a key at the toe of the new highwall and also shifts the bench further towards the low-wall. This may also require a chop pass if the wall is blocky. A chop pass involves the bucket being dropped down onto an angled highwall to scale the surface. The next sequence is the slowest operation, the blocks pass. However, this pass moves most of the material. It involves using the key to access to bottom of the material to lift it up to spoil or to an elevated bench level. The final cut if required is a pull back, pulling material back further to the low-wall side.
It looks fascinating, and definitely belongs in the article. However, it would benefit from a series of diagrams to explain what was being described. This would avoid the need for 'every other word' to be a wikilinked! A section on 'definition of terms' would be a useful bonus.
EdJogg 10:56, 15 December 2006 (UTC)
The GEM (Giant Excavating Machine)is a shovel, not a drag line. While the size and application are similar the machines opeation is not. A shovel works best while digging from its tracks up. A dragline does better while working below the level of its base.
I don't know the engineering involved, but nearly all shovels operate on tracks, while drag lines tend to have feet and are usually refered to as "walking draglines". This may have something to do with the method of operation. I have seen a couple of photos of draglines that have slid into the pit that they were digging.
The shovels also have an operational hazard in that the high wall can collapse on them. The GEM was damaged at one point in its career by such a fall. Steve