US239650A - Peters - Google Patents

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US239650A
US239650A US239650DA US239650A US 239650 A US239650 A US 239650A US 239650D A US239650D A US 239650DA US 239650 A US239650 A US 239650A
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tube
ore
portions
revolving
cylinders
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B02CRUSHING, PULVERISING, OR DISINTEGRATING; PREPARATORY TREATMENT OF GRAIN FOR MILLING
    • B02CCRUSHING, PULVERISING, OR DISINTEGRATING IN GENERAL; MILLING GRAIN
    • B02C18/00Disintegrating by knives or other cutting or tearing members which chop material into fragments
    • B02C18/06Disintegrating by knives or other cutting or tearing members which chop material into fragments with rotating knives
    • B02C18/14Disintegrating by knives or other cutting or tearing members which chop material into fragments with rotating knives within horizontal containers
    • B02C18/148Disintegrating by knives or other cutting or tearing members which chop material into fragments with rotating knives within horizontal containers specially adapted for disintegrating plastics, e.g. cinematographic films

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  • CHANDLER 0. ions, or NEWARK, NEW JERSEY, Assreuon or ONE-HALF TO HATFIELD HOPPER. or SAME rLAoE,
  • the object of my invention is to provide an improved apparatus for treating gold and silver bearing earth, sand, and granular ores,
  • the metal-bearing portions or particles of the mass while in a dry state, may be i more rapidly and cheaply separated from the other portions than by devices heretofore used, and the valuable contents of the mass will thus 1 be concentrated or confined in a smaller bulk of proportionally greater weigh t, thereby increasing the percentage of yield to the ton and making it feasible to profitably extract the precious metals out of poorer or leaner ores than heretofore.
  • Figure 1 represents avertical longitudinal section of the said apparatus.
  • Fig. 2 is a top view of the same, the cover and feed -platform being re- 0 moved.
  • the metal-bearing earth, sand, or other naturally granular or granulated ore is fed from 5 the platform A by means of a vibrating inclined spout, B, into the hopper O.
  • the spout B is pivoted at 6, near its rear end, and rests with its forward end upon an irregular camwheel, b, by whose revolving the spout is vi- 4o brated to cause the stuff to fallina continuous stream into and through the hopper O and between the crushing or mashing cylinders D.
  • the tube Gris connected at its upper end to the central opening in the casing of a revolving fan-blower, H, which,in 6o revolving, draws the air, and with it the dust orlight useless portions (tailings) of the mashed stuff, from the tube G in the direction of arrow at, and discharges it in direction of arrow 5 through the horizontal pipe or tube I. 6 5
  • a trough or hopper, J may be arranged under an opening in the under side of the tube I, to receive the heavier portions of the tailings, if it be found worth the while to extract the small amount of ore which may have been carried over thither with the air-current from the fan H.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Food Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Manufacture And Refinement Of Metals (AREA)

Description

(No Mode l.)
G. O. COATS.
Apparatus for Treating Ores.
Patented A ril 5,1881.
ii[Illllllllilllllbillllll IIIIIIIIIH java/aim NJ'ETERS, PNOTO-LIYNOGRAPHER, WASHINGTON, D 0.
. UNITED STATES PATENT 'QEEICE.
CHANDLER 0. (ions, or NEWARK, NEW JERSEY, Assreuon or ONE-HALF TO HATFIELD HOPPER. or SAME rLAoE,
APPARATUS FOR TREATING ORES.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 239,650, dated April 5, 1881.
Application filed September 21, 1880. (No model.)
To all whom it may concern Be it known that I, CHANDLER O. Come, of Newark, in the county of Essex and State of New Jersey, have invented a new and useful Improvement in Apparatusfor Treating Ores,
of which the following is a specification.
The object of my invention is to provide an improved apparatus for treating gold and silver bearing earth, sand, and granular ores,
whereby the metal-bearing portions or particles of the mass, while in a dry state, may be i more rapidly and cheaply separated from the other portions than by devices heretofore used, and the valuable contents of the mass will thus 1 be concentrated or confined in a smaller bulk of proportionally greater weigh t, thereby increasing the percentage of yield to the ton and making it feasible to profitably extract the precious metals out of poorer or leaner ores than heretofore.
It is evident that by concentratin g the value in a greatly-reduced bulk the subsequent operations of trituration and amalgamation are greatly facilitated and the expense of power,
2 5 time, and labor very materially decreased.
, In the accompanying drawings, Figure 1 represents avertical longitudinal section of the said apparatus. Fig. 2 is a top view of the same, the cover and feed -platform being re- 0 moved.
Similar letters of reference indicate corre spondin g parts.
The metal-bearing earth, sand, or other naturally granular or granulated ore is fed from 5 the platform A by means of a vibrating inclined spout, B, into the hopper O. The spout B is pivoted at 6, near its rear end, and rests with its forward end upon an irregular camwheel, b, by whose revolving the spout is vi- 4o brated to cause the stuff to fallina continuous stream into and through the hopper O and between the crushing or mashing cylinders D. These are arranged to revolve together in the direction of arrows 1, and directly underneath them are arranged rotary brushes or brushrollers E, revolving in the direction of arrows 2, in opposite direction to the erushers D, and in brushing contact with the surface of the latter. The gearing is so proportioned that the brush-rollers E move faster than the cylinders D, and thus more effectually brush oif the adhering stuff from their surfaces, throwing it down in the direction of arrow 3, through the inclined pipe F, into the upright dischargetube G, through which latter the heavier metalbearing portions fall down, and are collected below, to be then triturated and amalgamated in the usual way. The tube Gris connected at its upper end to the central opening in the casing of a revolving fan-blower, H, which,in 6o revolving, draws the air, and with it the dust orlight useless portions (tailings) of the mashed stuff, from the tube G in the direction of arrow at, and discharges it in direction of arrow 5 through the horizontal pipe or tube I. 6 5
A trough or hopper, J, may be arranged under an opening in the under side of the tube I, to receive the heavier portions of the tailings, if it be found worth the while to extract the small amount of ore which may have been carried over thither with the air-current from the fan H.
I have ascertained by experimentand assay that by this process and means earth and sand containing gold and silver in entirely too small 7 5 quantities to make the ordinary working of it at all possible without loss have yielded out of the condensed bulk discharged at the lower end of the tube G an amount equal to over one hundred dollars to the ton. The useless 8o portions, amounting to about three-fourths of the original bulk, have been separated and discharged at the end of pipe I and thrown away, thus sawing all the non-paying useless labor and expense of triturating and attempting to 8 amalgamate it for extraction of metals where there is none.
The application of a direct side blast to intercept the falling ore immediately beneath the cylinders D, as has formerly been attempt 0 ed, has proven ineffectual, affording only a partial and very imperfect separation, and I have by experiment found it necessary for successful operation that the ore should be acted upon during some distance of its fall by a directly 9 5 contrary vacuum-current or suction in a pipe, G, of size no larger than will suit the capacity of the fan. This insures uniform action on the entire volume of the falling ore.
Having thus'described my invention, what I claim as new, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is-
For the purpose of reducing the bulk of lean with the tube Gr above the lower end of the ore in a dry state to that of the metal-bearspout F, to raise the tailings by suction from 10 ing portion thereof, the combination of the rethe said tube G, as specified. A volving crushing-cylinders D, the brushing- 5 rollers E, revolving in opposite direction to the CHANDLER COATS said cylinders, the spout F, discharging into Witnesses: the uprighttube G, the fan H, and the final A. W. ALMQVIST, discharge-pipe I, the said fan being connected 1 JOHN M. STELLE.
US239650D Peters Expired - Lifetime US239650A (en)

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2636689A (en) * 1949-12-07 1953-04-28 Iowa State College Res Found Soil crushing or treating apparatus
US2882769A (en) * 1956-04-10 1959-04-21 Western Electric Co Insulation stripping unit

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2636689A (en) * 1949-12-07 1953-04-28 Iowa State College Res Found Soil crushing or treating apparatus
US2882769A (en) * 1956-04-10 1959-04-21 Western Electric Co Insulation stripping unit

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