Achieving 435-2540 Tonnes Per Shift from Continuous Miner Sections, A Report on the USAÆs Most Productive Coal Mines
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 196 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1988
Abstract
The U.S. Department of Interior's Bureau  of Mines has the opportunity to visit many U.S.  mines, including some that claim 2 to 5 times  the national average of 334 raw tonnes/unit  shift (tps) from a continuous miner section. In a project to assess the reasons for this  high production, the Bureau conducted two  studies. The first study focused on the 25 highest  producing continuous miner sections. What  stood out during the visits-was the quality of  the labor-management relations. In each of the  mines there was a positive labor/management  relationship based on mutual trust and a sense  that the employees were the company's most  valuable resource. Discussions with labor  revealed a universally positive attitude toward  the company. Interviews with the mine  superintendents invariably ranked the quality  and attitude of workers as more important than  anything else. Also during the mine visits of the 25- mine study, no engineering factors obviously  stood out. Time at the face was greater than  average, most were in coal over 1.52 m and the  roof was generally good. Also, none of the 25  mines had to contend with high methane levels.  Because this study found that a high percentage  of mines were in seams less than 1.52 m thick,  the second study examined thin seam mines only.
Citation
APA: (1988) Achieving 435-2540 Tonnes Per Shift from Continuous Miner Sections, A Report on the USAÆs Most Productive Coal Mines
MLA: Achieving 435-2540 Tonnes Per Shift from Continuous Miner Sections, A Report on the USAÆs Most Productive Coal Mines. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1988.
