US2885155A - Grinding mills with classifying linings - Google Patents

Grinding mills with classifying linings Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2885155A
US2885155A US517343A US51734355A US2885155A US 2885155 A US2885155 A US 2885155A US 517343 A US517343 A US 517343A US 51734355 A US51734355 A US 51734355A US 2885155 A US2885155 A US 2885155A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
bodies
mill
grinding
shell
lining
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US517343A
Inventor
Frankert Otto Peder
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
FLSmidth and Co AS
Original Assignee
FLSmidth and Co AS
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by FLSmidth and Co AS filed Critical FLSmidth and Co AS
Priority to US517343A priority Critical patent/US2885155A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2885155A publication Critical patent/US2885155A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B02CRUSHING, PULVERISING, OR DISINTEGRATING; PREPARATORY TREATMENT OF GRAIN FOR MILLING
    • B02CCRUSHING, PULVERISING, OR DISINTEGRATING IN GENERAL; MILLING GRAIN
    • B02C17/00Disintegrating by tumbling mills, i.e. mills having a container charged with the material to be disintegrated with or without special disintegrating members such as pebbles or balls
    • B02C17/18Details
    • B02C17/22Lining for containers

Definitions

  • This invention relates to grinding mills of the type employing a tubular shell having an inlet at one end and an outlet at the other and adapted to contain a charge of grinding bodies, which are classified according to size, as the mill rotates, by the internal lining of the shell. More specifically, the present invention is directed to grinding mills in which the lining eifecting classification of the grinding bodies is of such construction that the grinding bodies are kept in the zones of the shell, where they will operate most efficiently, and, at the same time, the small vgrinding bodies are kept from clogging grate openings in mills having such grates.
  • classifying linings employed in grinding mills have commonly extended the full length of the mill shell and have acted on the large grinding bodies to move them toward the inlet end of the shell, the small bodies then moving toward the outlet.
  • Classification of this sort is highly desirable, but, in a mill having a grate at the outlet end or at the outlet end of a compartment, the small grinding bodies may clog the grate openings and thus reduce the efficiency of the mill and increase the frequency of the cleaning of the mill.
  • the mill of the present invention provides a distribution of the grinding bodies, which insures efficient grinding in mills with grates as well as those of the air-swept type, and the novel features of the mill prevent the clogging of grate openings and also make possible selective grinding of materials differing in hardness.
  • the desired effects are achieved by providing the mill shell with a classifying lining divided into zones and acting differently in different zones according to the location of the zones. By proper formation of the lining in the various zones, distribution of the grinding bodies in the charge may be maintained in any desired manner.
  • Fig. l is an axial sectional view of the shell of a grinding mill of the prior art
  • Fig. 2 is a graph showing the distribution ofk small, medium, and large grinding bodies along the length of the shell of Fig. l;
  • Fig. 3 is a view similar to that of Fig. 1, showing one form of grinding mill of the present invention
  • Fig. 4 is a graph similar to Fig. 2 showing the distribution of grinding bodies of various sizes within the mill shell of Fig. 3;
  • Fig. 5 is an axial sectional view of another form of mill of the invention.
  • Fig. 6 is a graph similar to Fig. 2 showing the distribution of grinding bodies of various sizes within the mill shell of Fig. 5;
  • Fig. 7 is an axial sectional View cf a two-compartment mill of the invention.
  • Fig. 8 is an axial sectional view of another form of mill of the invention.
  • Fig. 9 is a cross-sectional view on an enlarged scale showing the structure of the lining members of the mill of Fig. 7.
  • the mill shown in Fig. l is typical of the prior art and it includes a cylindrical shell 10 having an inlet opening 11 at one end and an outlet opening 12 at the other.
  • the mill is provided with a lining 13 made up of a plurality of sections 14 with truste-conical internal surfaces. Adjacent the outlet 12 there is a grate 15 to prevent the loss of grinding bodies from the shell 10 as the ground product advances to outlet 12.
  • the grinding bodies may be balls, small cylinders, pebbles, etc., and the bodies in a charge vary substantially in size.
  • the frusto-conical lining members act to advance the larger grinding bodies toward the inlet of the shell and the smaller bodies then move toward the outlet.
  • the distribution of the bodies, after a period of operation of the mill, is shown in Fig. 2, where curve A represents the number of relatively small bodies in zones at different distances along the shell from the inlet, and curves B and C show the distribution along vthe shell of the bodies of medium and large size, respectively.
  • the curves show that the small bodies tend to accumulate at the outlet end of the mill immediately adjacent the grate, whereas the bodies of medium size form the major proportion of the charge at the middle of the shell and the large bodies accumulate at the inlet end.
  • the small bodies are liable to clog the grate and thus interfere with the passage of the ground product, and the continued reduction in size of the small bodies increases the clogging action, so that relatively frequent cleaning of the mill may be required.
  • the mill of Fig. 3 has a generally cylindrical shell 16 with an inlet opening 17 at one end and an outlet opening 18 at the other and it is provided with a lining divided into zones 19 and 20.
  • the lining 21 of zone 19 is made up of sections with frusto-conical inner surfaces and these sections have the classifying effect of advancing the larger grinding bodies toward the inlet of the shell so that the strnall bodies then move toward the outlet.
  • the lining 22 of zone 20 is formed with a cylindrical inner surface which has no such classifying action and a grate 23 is provided immediately before the outlet to prevent the escape of grinding bodies.
  • curve A shows the distribution of the small bodies at different' distances along the shell from the inlet and makes clear by comparison with curve A in Fig. 2 that there are substantially less small bodies adjacent the grate 23 than adjacent the grate 15 in the Imill of Fig. l.
  • Curves B' and C of Fig. 4 show that the distribution along the shell of l bodies of medium and large size, respectively, is approxithe lining of zone 27 acts on the bodies with the reverse effect. Adjacent the outlet 28, the grate 31 prevents the escape of grinding bodies from the mill.
  • Curve A" of Fig. 6 shows that combined classifying effects of the lining members in the zones 25 and 27 on the small grinding bodies cause a large proportion of these bodies to accumulate at the boundary of zones 25 andf 27 withrelatively smaller proportions adjacent the I inlet and the outlet.
  • Curve B shows that the distribution of medium sized bodies is substantially uniform throughout the mill and curve C" shows that the large Bodies accumulate in aboutf equal numbers adjacent.- the inlet and the outlet.
  • Mills of the invention may be ⁇ of multi-compartment types and one such mill is shownlin Fig. 7 as including a shell 32 with an inlet 33 and an outlet 34.
  • a grate 35' is ⁇ mounted within the shell adjacenttheoutlet, while ⁇ alsecond grate 36 subdivides the shell into compartments 31 and 38.
  • Compartment 37 may ⁇ contain a'charge of grinding bodies in the form of ⁇ balls of various sizes, while the ⁇ grinding bodies in compartment 38may contain cylindrical bodies varying in ⁇ size but generally smaller than the smallestballs in compartmentf37.
  • the lining-in each compartment is divided into a plurality of.
  • zones with the ⁇ lining members inthe different zones acting differently" on the grinding bodies In compartment37, there are two zones 39 and 40 and, incompartment 38, there are two zones 41 and 42.
  • the ⁇ lining members43 and 44 in the zones 39 and 41, respectively, are of the classifying typeand are constructed to cause the small grinding bodies to move toward the outlet 34 while the large., grinding bodies are moved in the opposite direction and, for this purpose, the members 43 and 44fmay ⁇ be of the type shown in Fig. 9 and more fully disclosed in4 my copending application, Serial No. 507,218, filed May l0, 1955, now Patent No. 2,801,804.
  • the lining members 45 in zone 40 are of the non-classifying type and may have projections parallel to the axis, while the members 46 in zone 42 are similar to the members 43 and 44 but oppositely disposed, so they act to advance the small grinding bodies toward the inlet 33, while the large bodies in the zone move toward the outlet 34.
  • the lining members 43 and 44 are plates formed with depressions 60 separated by projections or lands 61.
  • the projections are wide in relation to the depressions and are preferably more than twice as wide as the depressions.
  • the depressions may be of V-section, as shown, and the depth of the projections measured from their top to the bottom of a depression is such that a large grinding body B cannot penetrate to the bottom of a depression, while a small grinding body B' may do so.
  • the projections are sections of helices of a pitch between 30 and 60 with a pitch of 45 preferred and the plates are so mounted in the shell that the projections form continuous helical channels from one end of the ⁇ shell to the other,ralthough the helices may be interrupted.
  • the helices are of a hand opposite to the direction ⁇ ofrotation of the shell viewed from the inlet end. Since the large grinding bodies cannot penetrate to the bottom of the depressions, the latter have little lifting effect on such bodies, but the small grinding bodies entering the depressionsl are moved lengthwise of the mill toward the outlet end thereof as the mill rotates. The movement of the smaller grinding bodies toward the mill outlet results in the larger bodies accumulating ⁇ near the inlet, as is desirable.
  • the classifying action in the compartment 37 is similar to that in the mill of Fig. 3, and the classifying action in compartment 38 is similar to that in the mill of Fig. 5; Accordingly, the distribution of the grinding bodies within the cornp artments 37 and 38 will be similar to the distribution within the mills of Figs. 3 and 5, respectively, and asA shown inFigs. 4 and 6. In a mill providedwith lining members of the construction and arrangement shown in Fig. 7, it is possible to use smaller grinding bodiesand thus obtain a finer ground product than would otherwise be feasible.
  • mill is of the air-swept type and has a tubular shell 47 with an inlet 48 and anoutlet-49 ⁇ and it is divided into zones 50, 51, and 52.
  • the ⁇ lining members 53 and 55 in the zones 50 and 52, respectively, are formed to provide a plurality of frusto-conical internal surfaces effecting a classication, in which the large grinding bodies move toward the inlet 48 andthe small bodies toward the outlet 49.
  • the lining 54 in the central zone 51 is cylindrical and without classifying effect. Initially, zoner50fis filled with large grinding bodies, zone 52y with ⁇ small grinding bodies, and thecentral zone 51 with a mixture of large and small bodies.
  • hard material which is not ground close to the inlet by the large grinding bodies inzone 50, will beground in the central zone 51 and, at the same time, the small grinding bodies in zone 51 will grind the softer material already ground to a substantial extent in zone 50.
  • Some of the softer material will be ground to final size by the Asmall grinding bodies in zone 51 ⁇ and will be carried outof the mill by theair flowing through theimill from the inletto the outlet.
  • the material which has notbeen sutlcientlyground inthe central ⁇ zone 51 and ismainly of a ⁇ hard ⁇ nature, will enter zone SZand receive its final grinding there.
  • zone 50 that part ofthe mill containing zone 50may be omitted and the pre-grinding normally taking place in the zone may be carried out in a separate Crusher. If the materials crushed vary in hardness, the ⁇ softer materials will be delivered by the crusher in a morefnely divided state and such materialsmay best be introduced into a mill having a zone at the inlet end, such as zone 51, which contains a mixture of large and small grinding bodies and has no classifying action, followed by a classifying zone, such as zone 52, having a lining made up of members 55.
  • A. grinding mill which comprises a cylindrical shell having an inlet at one end and an outlet at the other, and a charge of grinding bodies within the shell, the bodies in ⁇ the charge varying in size, and a lining within the shell made up of a plurality of zones, the lining in less than all the zones being formed to classify the grinding bodies and causing the large grinding bodies to advance toward the inlet and the small grinding bodies to advance toward the outlet, said classifying lining having projectionson its inner surface separated by depressions and of an average width greaterthanthe average width of the depressions, the projections having the shape of sections of helices of a hand opposite to the direction of rotation of the mill shell, when viewed from the inlet end.
  • each compartment having a zone with said classifying 1ining formed to advance the large ⁇ grinding bodies toward the inlet and the small grinding bodiestoward the outlet, the first of the compartments having a zone adjacent the grate with a non-classifying lining and the second ofthe compartments havinga zone adjacent the outlet with said classifying lining installedin the shell in such manner as to advance the large grinding bodies toward the outlet and the small grinding bodies toward the inlet.
  • the grinding mill of claim l in which the lining in at least one zone issaid classifying lining formed to advance the large grinding bodies toward the inlet and the small grinding bodies toward the outlet and the lining in at least one other zone is said classifying lining installed in the shell in such manner as to advance the large grindingbcdiestoward the outlet and the small grinding bodies toward the inlet.

Description

r 2,885,155 Ice Patented May 5, 1959.
GRNDING MILLS WITH CLASSIFYING LININGS Otto Peder Frankert, Copenhagen, Denmark, assignor to F. L. Smidth & Co., New York, N.Y., a corporation of New Jersey Application `lune 22, 1955, Serial No. 517,343
4 Claims. (Cl. 241-153) This invention relates to grinding mills of the type employing a tubular shell having an inlet at one end and an outlet at the other and adapted to contain a charge of grinding bodies, which are classified according to size, as the mill rotates, by the internal lining of the shell. More specifically, the present invention is directed to grinding mills in which the lining eifecting classification of the grinding bodies is of such construction that the grinding bodies are kept in the zones of the shell, where they will operate most efficiently, and, at the same time, the small vgrinding bodies are kept from clogging grate openings in mills having such grates.
Heretofore, classifying linings employed in grinding mills have commonly extended the full length of the mill shell and have acted on the large grinding bodies to move them toward the inlet end of the shell, the small bodies then moving toward the outlet. Classification of this sort is highly desirable, but, in a mill having a grate at the outlet end or at the outlet end of a compartment, the small grinding bodies may clog the grate openings and thus reduce the efficiency of the mill and increase the frequency of the cleaning of the mill.
The mill of the present invention provides a distribution of the grinding bodies, which insures efficient grinding in mills with grates as well as those of the air-swept type, and the novel features of the mill prevent the clogging of grate openings and also make possible selective grinding of materials differing in hardness. The desired effects are achieved by providing the mill shell with a classifying lining divided into zones and acting differently in different zones according to the location of the zones. By proper formation of the lining in the various zones, distribution of the grinding bodies in the charge may be maintained in any desired manner.
For a better understanding of the following invention, reference is made to the following drawings, in which:
Fig. l is an axial sectional view of the shell of a grinding mill of the prior art;
Fig. 2 is a graph showing the distribution ofk small, medium, and large grinding bodies along the length of the shell of Fig. l;
Fig. 3 is a view similar to that of Fig. 1, showing one form of grinding mill of the present invention;
Fig. 4 is a graph similar to Fig. 2 showing the distribution of grinding bodies of various sizes within the mill shell of Fig. 3;
Fig. 5 is an axial sectional view of another form of mill of the invention;
Fig. 6 is a graph similar to Fig. 2 showing the distribution of grinding bodies of various sizes within the mill shell of Fig. 5;
Fig. 7 is an axial sectional View cf a two-compartment mill of the invention;
Fig. 8 is an axial sectional view of another form of mill of the invention; and
Fig. 9 is a cross-sectional view on an enlarged scale showing the structure of the lining members of the mill of Fig. 7.
The mill shown in Fig. l is typical of the prior art and it includes a cylindrical shell 10 having an inlet opening 11 at one end and an outlet opening 12 at the other. The mill is provided with a lining 13 made up of a plurality of sections 14 with truste-conical internal surfaces. Adjacent the outlet 12 there is a grate 15 to prevent the loss of grinding bodies from the shell 10 as the ground product advances to outlet 12. The grinding bodies may be balls, small cylinders, pebbles, etc., and the bodies in a charge vary substantially in size.
As the mill of Fig. 1 is rotated, the frusto-conical lining members act to advance the larger grinding bodies toward the inlet of the shell and the smaller bodies then move toward the outlet. The distribution of the bodies, after a period of operation of the mill, is shown in Fig. 2, where curve A represents the number of relatively small bodies in zones at different distances along the shell from the inlet, and curves B and C show the distribution along vthe shell of the bodies of medium and large size, respectively. The curves show that the small bodies tend to accumulate at the outlet end of the mill immediately adjacent the grate, whereas the bodies of medium size form the major proportion of the charge at the middle of the shell and the large bodies accumulate at the inlet end. The small bodies are liable to clog the grate and thus interfere with the passage of the ground product, and the continued reduction in size of the small bodies increases the clogging action, so that relatively frequent cleaning of the mill may be required.
In accordance with the present invention, the problem of clogging the grate openings is avoided in a variety of ways, one of which is illustrated in Fig. 3. The mill of Fig. 3 has a generally cylindrical shell 16 with an inlet opening 17 at one end and an outlet opening 18 at the other and it is provided with a lining divided into zones 19 and 20. The lining 21 of zone 19 is made up of sections with frusto-conical inner surfaces and these sections have the classifying effect of advancing the larger grinding bodies toward the inlet of the shell so that the strnall bodies then move toward the outlet. The lining 22 of zone 20 is formed with a cylindrical inner surface which has no such classifying action and a grate 23 is provided immediately before the outlet to prevent the escape of grinding bodies. As a consequence of the use of the different kinds of lining in the two zones, the distribution of the grinding bodies in the mill of Fig. 3 is different from that in the mill of Fig. l.
The distribution of grinding bodies in the mill of Fig. 3 is shown by the curves in Fig. 4. Of these curves, curve A shows the distribution of the small bodies at different' distances along the shell from the inlet and makes clear by comparison with curve A in Fig. 2 that there are substantially less small bodies adjacent the grate 23 than adjacent the grate 15 in the Imill of Fig. l. Curves B' and C of Fig. 4 show that the distribution along the shell of l bodies of medium and large size, respectively, is approxithe lining of zone 27 acts on the bodies with the reverse effect. Adjacent the outlet 28, the grate 31 prevents the escape of grinding bodies from the mill.
` Curve A" of Fig. 6 shows that combined classifying effects of the lining members in the zones 25 and 27 on the small grinding bodies cause a large proportion of these bodies to accumulate at the boundary of zones 25 andf 27 withrelatively smaller proportions adjacent the I inlet and the outlet. Curve B shows that the distribution of medium sized bodies is substantially uniform throughout the mill and curve C" shows that the large Bodies accumulate in aboutf equal numbers adjacent.- the inlet and the outlet.
Mills of the invention may be` of multi-compartment types and one such mill is shownlin Fig. 7 as including a shell 32 with an inlet 33 and an outlet 34. A grate 35'is` mounted within the shell adjacenttheoutlet, while` alsecond grate 36 subdivides the shell into compartments 31 and 38. Compartment 37 may` contain a'charge of grinding bodies in the form of` balls of various sizes, while the` grinding bodies in compartment 38may contain cylindrical bodies varying in` size but generally smaller than the smallestballs in compartmentf37. The lining-in each compartment is divided into a plurality of. zones with the `lining members inthe different zones acting differently" on the grinding bodies; In compartment37, there are two zones 39 and 40 and, incompartment 38, there are two zones 41 and 42. The` lining members43 and 44 in the zones 39 and 41, respectively, are of the classifying typeand are constructed to cause the small grinding bodies to move toward the outlet 34 while the large., grinding bodies are moved in the opposite direction and, for this purpose, the members 43 and 44fmay` be of the type shown in Fig. 9 and more fully disclosed in4 my copending application, Serial No. 507,218, filed May l0, 1955, now Patent No. 2,801,804. The lining members 45 in zone 40 are of the non-classifying type and may have projections parallel to the axis, while the members 46 in zone 42 are similar to the members 43 and 44 but oppositely disposed, so they act to advance the small grinding bodies toward the inlet 33, while the large bodies in the zone move toward the outlet 34.
The lining members 43 and 44 are plates formed with depressions 60 separated by projections or lands 61. The projections are wide in relation to the depressions and are preferably more than twice as wide as the depressions. The depressions may be of V-section, as shown, and the depth of the projections measured from their top to the bottom of a depression is such that a large grinding body B cannot penetrate to the bottom of a depression, while a small grinding body B' may do so. The projections are sections of helices of a pitch between 30 and 60 with a pitch of 45 preferred and the plates are so mounted in the shell that the projections form continuous helical channels from one end of the` shell to the other,ralthough the helices may be interrupted. The helices are of a hand opposite to the direction `ofrotation of the shell viewed from the inlet end. Since the large grinding bodies cannot penetrate to the bottom of the depressions, the latter have little lifting effect on such bodies, but the small grinding bodies entering the depressionsl are moved lengthwise of the mill toward the outlet end thereof as the mill rotates. The movement of the smaller grinding bodies toward the mill outlet results in the larger bodies accumulating `near the inlet, as is desirable.
With the construction above described, the classifying action in the compartment 37 is similar to that in the mill of Fig. 3, and the classifying action in compartment 38 is similar to that in the mill of Fig. 5; Accordingly, the distribution of the grinding bodies within the cornp artments 37 and 38 will be similar to the distribution within the mills of Figs. 3 and 5, respectively, and asA shown inFigs. 4 and 6. In a mill providedwith lining members of the construction and arrangement shown in Fig. 7, it is possible to use smaller grinding bodiesand thus obtain a finer ground product than would otherwise be feasible.
Insome instances, it may be; desirable to grind materials containing components differing in hardness and, for thiswpurpose, the mill of Fig. 8 may be used. The
mill is of the air-swept type and has a tubular shell 47 with an inlet 48 and anoutlet-49` and it is divided into zones 50, 51, and 52. The` lining members 53 and 55 in the zones 50 and 52, respectively, are formed to provide a plurality of frusto-conical internal surfaces effecting a classication, in which the large grinding bodies move toward the inlet 48 andthe small bodies toward the outlet 49. The lining 54 in the central zone 51 is cylindrical and without classifying effect. Initially, zoner50fis filled with large grinding bodies, zone 52y with` small grinding bodies, and thecentral zone 51 with a mixture of large and small bodies. In operation, hard material, which is not ground close to the inlet by the large grinding bodies inzone 50, will beground in the central zone 51 and, at the same time, the small grinding bodies in zone 51 will grind the softer material already ground to a substantial extent in zone 50. Some of the softer material will be ground to final size by the Asmall grinding bodies in zone 51` and will be carried outof the mill by theair flowing through theimill from the inletto the outlet. The material, which has notbeen sutlcientlyground inthe central` zone 51 and ismainly of a` hard` nature, will enter zone SZand receive its final grinding there.
If desired, that part ofthe mill containing zone 50may be omitted and the pre-grinding normally taking place in the zone may be carried out in a separate Crusher. If the materials crushed vary in hardness, the `softer materials will be delivered by the crusher in a morefnely divided state and such materialsmay best be introduced into a mill having a zone at the inlet end, such as zone 51, which contains a mixture of large and small grinding bodies and has no classifying action, followed by a classifying zone, such as zone 52, having a lining made up of members 55.
If claim:
l; A. grinding mill which comprises a cylindrical shell having an inlet at one end and an outlet at the other, and a charge of grinding bodies within the shell, the bodies in` the charge varying in size, and a lining within the shell made up of a plurality of zones, the lining in less than all the zones being formed to classify the grinding bodies and causing the large grinding bodies to advance toward the inlet and the small grinding bodies to advance toward the outlet, said classifying lining having projectionson its inner surface separated by depressions and of an average width greaterthanthe average width of the depressions, the projections having the shape of sections of helices of a hand opposite to the direction of rotation of the mill shell, when viewed from the inlet end.
2. The grinding mill of claim l in which the cylindrical shell is divided into two compartments by a grate, each compartment having a zone with said classifying 1ining formed to advance the large` grinding bodies toward the inlet and the small grinding bodiestoward the outlet, the first of the compartments having a zone adjacent the grate with a non-classifying lining and the second ofthe compartments havinga zone adjacent the outlet with said classifying lining installedin the shell in such manner as to advance the large grinding bodies toward the outlet and the small grinding bodies toward the inlet.
3. The grinding mill of claim l in which the lining in at least one zone issaid classifying lining formed to advance the large grinding bodies toward the inlet and the small grinding bodies toward the outlet and the lining in at least one other zone is said classifying lining installed in the shell in such manner as to advance the large grindingbcdiestoward the outlet and the small grinding bodies toward the inlet.
4. The grinding mill of claim 3 in which the zone adjacent the outlet end has said classifying lining effective to move large grinding bodies toward the outletand small bodies toward the inlet.
(References on following page) References Cited in the le of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS Hundeshagen Dec. 3, 1901 Hundeshagen Dec. 17, 1901 Hardinge July 27, 1909 Hansen Jan. 6, 1914 Cole Feb. 22, 1916 Markus Dec. 23, 1924 Carman June 9, 1925 10 Kueneman Jan. 6, 1931 Siegfried Oct. 6, 1942 6 Fitzgerald Nov. 14, 1944 Slegten Dec. 8, 1953 FOREIGN PATENTS Great Britain of 1902 Great Britain of 1914 Germany Mar. 3, 1902 Germany Apr. 5, 1902 France Jan. 21, 1913 France Mar. 15, 1926 Great Britain Ian. 19, 1955
US517343A 1955-06-22 1955-06-22 Grinding mills with classifying linings Expired - Lifetime US2885155A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US517343A US2885155A (en) 1955-06-22 1955-06-22 Grinding mills with classifying linings

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US517343A US2885155A (en) 1955-06-22 1955-06-22 Grinding mills with classifying linings

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2885155A true US2885155A (en) 1959-05-05

Family

ID=24059429

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US517343A Expired - Lifetime US2885155A (en) 1955-06-22 1955-06-22 Grinding mills with classifying linings

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2885155A (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3529781A (en) * 1966-06-23 1970-09-22 Smidth & Co As F L Rotary grinding mill
US3630459A (en) * 1969-03-05 1971-12-28 Pierre Marie Arsene Slegten Lining for cylindrical mills
US4243182A (en) * 1979-03-29 1981-01-06 Minneapolis Electric Steel Castings Company Liner assembly for ball mills
US4254592A (en) * 1978-01-31 1981-03-10 Georg Fischer Ag Barrel-type shot blasting machine

Citations (18)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE129653C (en) *
DE129293C (en) *
US688229A (en) * 1901-08-06 1901-12-03 Fritz Hundeshagen Ball grinding-mill.
US689347A (en) * 1901-08-06 1901-12-17 Fritz Hundeshagen Ball grinding-mill.
GB190202385A (en) * 1902-01-29 1902-10-30 Fritz Hundeshagen Improvements in or relating to Grinding Mills.
US928967A (en) * 1908-12-17 1909-07-27 Hardinge Conical Mill Company Ore-crushing apparatus.
FR450499A (en) * 1912-01-09 1913-03-26 Adolf Vollmering Conical mill with stepped compartments
US1083400A (en) * 1913-02-01 1914-01-06 Hans A Hansen Lining for ball or pebble mills.
GB191416286A (en) * 1914-01-30 1915-01-21 Harry Williams Hardinge Improvements relating to Rotary Tubemills.
US1172673A (en) * 1913-11-10 1916-02-22 David Cole Grinding-mill.
US1520537A (en) * 1923-03-16 1924-12-23 Markus Louis De Method and apparatus for pulverizing
US1541114A (en) * 1924-02-23 1925-06-09 Charles L Carman Ball or pebble mill
FR606812A (en) * 1924-12-31 1926-06-21 Improvements made to grinding rolls and other similar devices
US1787788A (en) * 1928-08-21 1931-01-06 John R Kueneman Grinding mill
US2297804A (en) * 1939-06-03 1942-10-06 James F Siegfried Material reducing mill
US2362811A (en) * 1942-01-29 1944-11-14 Louis A Fitzgerald Ball mill liner
US2661908A (en) * 1950-05-08 1953-12-08 Jean A Slegten Air swept tube mill with pocketed liner structure for automatic classification of grinding bodies and ground material
GB722191A (en) * 1951-01-23 1955-01-19 Miag Muehlenbau & Ind Gmbh Improvements in or relating to lining plates for drum mills

Patent Citations (18)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE129293C (en) *
DE129653C (en) *
US688229A (en) * 1901-08-06 1901-12-03 Fritz Hundeshagen Ball grinding-mill.
US689347A (en) * 1901-08-06 1901-12-17 Fritz Hundeshagen Ball grinding-mill.
GB190202385A (en) * 1902-01-29 1902-10-30 Fritz Hundeshagen Improvements in or relating to Grinding Mills.
US928967A (en) * 1908-12-17 1909-07-27 Hardinge Conical Mill Company Ore-crushing apparatus.
FR450499A (en) * 1912-01-09 1913-03-26 Adolf Vollmering Conical mill with stepped compartments
US1083400A (en) * 1913-02-01 1914-01-06 Hans A Hansen Lining for ball or pebble mills.
US1172673A (en) * 1913-11-10 1916-02-22 David Cole Grinding-mill.
GB191416286A (en) * 1914-01-30 1915-01-21 Harry Williams Hardinge Improvements relating to Rotary Tubemills.
US1520537A (en) * 1923-03-16 1924-12-23 Markus Louis De Method and apparatus for pulverizing
US1541114A (en) * 1924-02-23 1925-06-09 Charles L Carman Ball or pebble mill
FR606812A (en) * 1924-12-31 1926-06-21 Improvements made to grinding rolls and other similar devices
US1787788A (en) * 1928-08-21 1931-01-06 John R Kueneman Grinding mill
US2297804A (en) * 1939-06-03 1942-10-06 James F Siegfried Material reducing mill
US2362811A (en) * 1942-01-29 1944-11-14 Louis A Fitzgerald Ball mill liner
US2661908A (en) * 1950-05-08 1953-12-08 Jean A Slegten Air swept tube mill with pocketed liner structure for automatic classification of grinding bodies and ground material
GB722191A (en) * 1951-01-23 1955-01-19 Miag Muehlenbau & Ind Gmbh Improvements in or relating to lining plates for drum mills

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3529781A (en) * 1966-06-23 1970-09-22 Smidth & Co As F L Rotary grinding mill
US3630459A (en) * 1969-03-05 1971-12-28 Pierre Marie Arsene Slegten Lining for cylindrical mills
US4254592A (en) * 1978-01-31 1981-03-10 Georg Fischer Ag Barrel-type shot blasting machine
US4243182A (en) * 1979-03-29 1981-01-06 Minneapolis Electric Steel Castings Company Liner assembly for ball mills

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2332701A (en) System and method of grinding
US4243182A (en) Liner assembly for ball mills
US1872036A (en) Grinding mill
US2885155A (en) Grinding mills with classifying linings
US4200242A (en) Liner in grinding mill
US2193956A (en) Liner for ball mills
US3739993A (en) Grinding mills
US2801804A (en) Ball mill linings and grinding body charges
US1591941A (en) Comminuting mill
US3027105A (en) Rotary grinding mill short-rod and ball type
US2743060A (en) Ball mill with risers on liners to throw balls and oversize material towards feed end of mill and to progress smaller balls and fine material towards discharge end of mill
US4211369A (en) Tumbling mills
US2256841A (en) Grinding mill
US1683627A (en) Pulverizing machine
US2731210A (en) Cylindrical rotating mill with stepped and studded liner for automatic classification of grinding balls and material
US1787788A (en) Grinding mill
US2876957A (en) Ribbed frusto-conical lining for tube mills
US1430432A (en) Conical or cylinder grinding mill
US1363990A (en) Ore-grinding machine
US792778A (en) Pebble-mill.
US1524871A (en) Grinding mill
US667657A (en) Ball grinding-mill.
US2931583A (en) Grinding mills
US1975501A (en) Tube mill or ball mill
US2950869A (en) Ball mill grates