Case History: Tube Feeder System
Maintenance-Free Tube Feeder System Reduces
Waste and Dust Issues at Graymont Lime Plant
Lime and limestone products are among the oldest materials used
for a wide variety of applications. Today, these products serve
as an essential building block in virtually every industrial
process. For Graymont, a leading producer of these products,
that means a customer base that crosses into such diverse industries
as environmental remediation, steel, pulp and paper, mining,
power generation, agriculture, construction materials, chemical
and waste treatment, and more.
As the third largest producer of lime in North America, Graymont
is committed to efficient production and to responsibly meeting
society’s need for its products by controlling the impact
of its operations on the environment. “Graymont makes a
conscious and ongoing effort to protect the health and safety
of our employees, visitors to our sites, and people in surrounding
communities,” explains Kim Jaynes, Plant Engineer for Graymont’s
Cricket Mountain Plant near Delta, Utah.
“In all aspects of our operations, we strive to not only
reduce waste, but to identify and prevent hazards, as well. Here
in our Cricket Mountain Plant, we recently ran across a problem
that had negative potential in both areas.”
The environment in which the plant is located and the nature
of some of its product create conditions where controlling dust
isn critical. In this case, the plant had a belt conveyor that
transported minus–1/8 inch sized quick lime from two screens
to an elevator, to be lifted to a product storage silo. It was
discovered that they were spending at least 4 man-hours each
week just to sweep and shovel the carryback from the conveyor.
The dust problem also affected production, since dust continually
built up in the conveyor’s webbing and moving parts, contributing
to checking and wear of the belt
“The carryback, which was discarded as unusable, amounted
to about 5 tons per week. We tried using belt scrapers, but they
didn’t hold up under the adverse conditions. We also tried
an air knife, but it proved to be ineffective, and used expensive
plant compressed air, as well. It was the that we considered
that we already had a Vibra Screw vibrating tube feeder in operation
for a similar application,” Jaynes
said.
The Vibra Screw tube feeder, which had been installed nearly
six years ago, had been so effective that it was basically forgotten.
It literally ran day in and day out with so few problems, that
it grew to be taken for granted.
Jaynes contacted Vibra Screw, asking the company to spec and
quote a new tube feeder to replace the belt conveyor in question.
With hands-on engineering support from Vibra Screw, a vibrating
tube feeder system was soon installed. It eliminated dust and
reduced carryback and the need for maintenance.
The unit consists of a sealed tube mounted with two rotary vibrators
and supported on special elastomer isloators. There are no internal
moving parts and the unit is totally sealed. In operation, applied
vibration moves material along the tube surface, from inlet to
outlet. Inlet and outlet seals provide a dust-free interface
with the rest of the production process.
“The new Vibra Screw tube feeder provided material conveying
without the carryback and without the need for frequent belt
replacement associated with a belt-type conveyor,” Jaynes
reported. “And because the tube feeder is totally enclosed,
it greatly reduced our overall need for dust collection and control.
These advantages allowed us to keep nearly 5 tons of lime per
week in the product stream as salable material, while freeing
up man-hours that could be used to enhance production rather
than performing maintenance and housekeeping.”
Kim Robert Jaynes
Plant Engineer
Graymont Western US, Inc., Cricket Mountain Facility
Mr. Jaynes is a graduate of Utah State University with a Bachelor’s
degree in mechanical engineering and a Master’s degree
in biological and agricultural engineering. Prior to joining
Graymont, he served as Site Managing Engineer (Pollution Control
and Ventilation) and as a Project and Maintenance Engineer for
Serbaco, Inc., in Portland Oregon, and as Assistant Factory Engineer
for Premier Pacific Seafood, Inc. in Seattle, Washington. He
also holds an Associate of Science degree from the College of
Southern Idaho, has completed and passed the Fundamentals of
Engineering examination, is an E.P.A. certified refrigerant handler
for two types of systems, and is certified in method 9 opacity.
Richard C. Wahl
Vice President
Vibra Screw, Inc.
Mr. Wahl is Vice President, principal and technical manager
of Vibra Screw. He earned a BS in mechanical engineering from
the University of Virginia. He has numerous patents for bulk
material handling equipment and is a published author in the
field.
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