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Bucket Wheel Excavator Technology for Mining Lignite in TexasBy Karl J. Benecke
Though the first patent on a bucket wheel excavator (BWE) was granted in 1881 in the US, this technology was developed in Germany to the high standards of today. However, this development was only pos
Jan 8, 1979
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Bucket Wheel Excavator Technology for Mining Lignite in TexasBy Karl J. Benecke
Though the first patent on a bucket wheel excavator (BWE) was granted in 1881 in the US, this technology was developed in Germany to the high standards of today. However, this development was only pos
Jan 1, 1980
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Bucket Wheel Excavators: How To Choose The Right One For The JobBy George E. Aiken
Modern high speed bucket wheel excavators (BWEs) can dig materials which power shovels can't handle without blasting. Yet these machines are not used in any large, open pit ore mines in the Unite
Jan 1, 1966
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Bucket Wheels in GermanyDuring the last 15 years, the bucket wheel has become increasingly popular as a mining tool. Being a large-capacity continuous mining excavator, the machine offers low actual operating costs and low u
Jan 9, 1960
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Bucketwheel Excavators And Their Potential In The Mineral IndustryBy W. L. Price
Since they were first introduced in the United States in 1964, rail mounted bucket wheel stacker-reclaimers have gained wide acceptance by the coal burning power plant group. Other installations inclu
Jan 1, 1970
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Budget For The Year 1921 - Adopted At Meeting Of Board Of Directors. Feb. 15, 1921[Estimated Receipts Dues: Arrears $ 3,500.00 Current 108,115.00 New Members 11,937.00 In Advance 1,763.00 $125,315.00 Initiation Fees 7,250.00 Initiation Fees-Additional if increased to $20.00
Jan 1, 1925
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Budget for Year 1921Estimated Receipts Dues Arrears $ 3,500 00 Current 108,115 00 New Members - 11,937 00 In Advance 1,763 00 $125,315 00 Initiation Fees - 7,250 00 Initiation Fees-Additional if increased to $20 0
Jan 1, 1923
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Budget Quake Rocks The InteriorBy Freeman Bishop
The Interior Department has been in a state of disarray for many months. At first this was attributed to Interior Secretary Walter Hickel's inability to anticipate how his words would be interpre
Jan 1, 1970
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Budget Recommendations For MiningFIGURES covering appropriations recommended by the Budget Bureau for the Bureau of Mines at Washington for next year are now available and are as quoted below. APPROPRIATION BUDGET APPROPRIATION 192
Jan 1, 1928
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Buffalo Meeting - October, 1888Jan 1, 1889
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Buffalo Meeting - October, 1898Jan 1, 1899
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Buffalo Paper - A Description of the Semet-Solvay By-Product Coke-Oven Plant at Ensley, Ala. (Discussion, 873)By William Hutton Blauvelt
An official of one of the prominent iron companies of the South recently made the following statement during a discussion of the present conditions of the Southern iron business: " The trouble with us
Jan 1, 1899
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Buffalo Paper - A Differential Regenerative Hot-Blast Stove and its Application to an Open- Hearth Blast-Furnace.By Jacob T. Wainwright
This stove has been designed to meet the requirements of a fur nave that must be operated with either a reducing or a neutral flame ; and more particularly to make feasible the operating of re duction
Jan 1, 1889
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Buffalo Paper - A Modification of Bischof's Method for Determining the Fusibility of Clays, as Applied to Non-Refractory Clays, and the Resistance of Fire-Clays to FluxesBy H. O. Hofman
INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, In deternlining experimentally the fusibility of clays, two kinds of methods may be distinguished—the direct and the indirect. Of the direct methods, that of Seger has foun
Jan 1, 1899
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Buffalo Paper - A New Assay for MercuryBy Richard E. Chism
The dry methods of assaying mercury-ores and other combinations of mercury all rest upon the volatility of this metal as a beginning. After the separation of the mercury in the form of vapor from t
Jan 1, 1899
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Buffalo Paper - A Note upon a Modification of the Reducing Process Used by the Carbon Iron CompanyBy Alfred E. Hunt
In a paper written for the Boston meeting of February, 1888 (Trans., xvi., 693), on "Some Recent Improvements in OpenHearth Steel Practice," the writer described the reducing agent used by the Carbon
Jan 1, 1889
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Buffalo Paper - A Present Need in the Engineering ProfessionBy William B. Potter
We have come together on this occasion, as so often before the members of the Institute have met in friendly council, to hear and discuss whatever investigation, observation, and experience during the
Jan 1, 1889
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Buffalo Paper - Analysis of Blast-Furnace Gas While Blowing InBy Ralph H. Sweetser
When a furnace-manager is '(blowing in," he generally has no time to consider the composition of the waste gas, and does not bother with it, except to take care that he does not get " gassed." Mo
Jan 1, 1899
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Buffalo Paper - Anthracite and Coke, Separate and Mixed, in the Warwick Blast-FurnaceBy Edgar S. Cook
The Warwick furnace at Pottstown, Pa., constructed for anthracite fuel, is, as may be remembered, 554 feet high, with 15; feet bosh. The actual working height from stock-line to bottom is only 474 fee
Jan 1, 1889
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Buffalo Paper - Asphalt and its UsesBy F. V. Greene
This paper is based on my experience in the use of asphalt, for paving and other purposes, during the last ten years, part of the
Jan 1, 1889