What Is Belt Mistracking?
Conveyor belt mistracking (also called belt wandering or belt deviation) occurs when the belt runs off-centre on the idler rollers, moving sideways rather than following the centreline of the conveyor. It is one of the most common conveyor problems in mining operations and, if not corrected, causes accelerated edge wear, spillage, structural damage and ultimately belt failure.
β οΈ Cost Warning
A severely mistracking belt on a 1,000 t/h iron ore conveyor can cause belt edge damage requiring full replacement within 3β? months. The cost of a mistracking belt β?including product loss, cleanup, and premature replacement β?frequently exceeds $100,000 USD per year on a major mine conveyor.
The 6 Root Causes of Belt Mistracking
1. Off-Centre Loading
When material lands off-centre at the loading point, it creates an uneven weight distribution across the belt width. The heavier side creates more rolling resistance on those idlers, causing the belt to drift towards the lighter side. This is the most common cause on variable-tonnage conveyors.
Fix: Adjust the chute geometry to ensure material lands on the centre of the belt. Install a centring plate or spoon inside the chute. Reduce drop height to prevent material rebound.
2. Misaligned Idler Rollers
Idler frames that are not perpendicular to the belt travel direction β?even by 1β?mm β?will steer the belt sideways. The effect accumulates over multiple idlers. Idlers can become misaligned through installation errors, ground settlement, or impact damage from falling ore.
Fix: Survey idler alignment with a straightedge or laser. Idlers should be perpendicular to the belt with a tolerance of Β±2mm. Re-align all deviated idlers starting from the tail end working towards the head.
3. Material Buildup on Rollers
Material that sticks to rollers (particularly on the return side) builds up unevenly and effectively changes the roller diameter on one side, steering the belt. This is very common on conveyors handling sticky coal, clay, or wet mineral fines.
Fix: Install belt scrapers at the head pulley and secondary scrapers on the return run. Add rubber disc self-cleaning rollers on the return side. Increase scraper blade contact pressure.
4. Pulley Misalignment or Wear
The head, tail and bend pulleys must all be perfectly square to the conveyor centreline. A pulley that is even slightly tilted will consistently push the belt in one direction. Worn pulley lagging that has worn unevenly creates the same problem.
Fix: Check all pulleys with a spirit level and square. Replace worn lagging. Re-align any pulley that is out of square by more than 1mm over the pulley face width.
5. Crooked Belt Splice
A belt splice that is not perfectly square to the belt width will cause the belt to track to one side every time the splice passes through the system. This creates a rhythmic mistracking that repeats at intervals equal to the belt length.
Fix: The only solution is to cut out the old splice and make a new one that is perfectly square. Use a mitre square or laser alignment tool when preparing the splice.
6. Belt Camber (Bow)
A belt that has been stored on its side, or exposed to moisture or heat on one edge, can develop a permanent bow (camber). This means even on a perfectly aligned conveyor, the belt will run to one side.
Fix: Run the belt empty in both directions and observe if mistracking reverses direction when belt direction reverses. If yes, the belt has camber and may need replacement.
Step-by-Step Diagnosis Process
- Observe where mistracking begins β?Does it start from the tail, after the loading point, or randomly? The location of onset indicates the cause.
- Run the belt empty β?If mistracking disappears when running empty, the cause is loading-related (off-centre feed, material buildup on rollers).
- Check splice squareness β?Mark the splice and observe if mistracking is rhythmic and coincides with splice passage.
- Survey idler alignment β?Walk the full length and check each idler frame with a square.
- Check pulleys β?Verify all pulleys are square and that lagging is even.
Self-Aligning Training Idlers β?When and How to Use Them
Self-aligning training idlers (also called tracking idlers) pivot on a vertical axis when the belt edge contacts a guide roller, automatically applying a corrective steering force. They are an effective solution for light mistracking but should not be relied upon as a substitute for proper alignment.
| Situation | Use Training Idler? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Light mistracking (<50mm) | Yes β?effective | Install at first point of deviation |
| Severe mistracking (>50mm) | Partial β?address root cause first | Training idler alone insufficient |
| Rhythmic splice-related drift | No | Must re-splice belt |
| Return belt mistracking | Yes β?V-return training idler | Install on return strand |
| Tail zone mistracking | Yes | Install 3β?m from tail pulley |
β?Engineering Rule
Install no more than 3 training idlers per 100m of conveyor. Excessive training idlers indicate underlying alignment problems that should be corrected directly. Training idlers on both the carry and return strands simultaneously usually indicates a belt camber problem.
Preventive Maintenance Schedule
- Daily: Visual inspection of belt position at head and tail β?note any deviation from centreline
- Weekly: Check and clean all return rollers for material buildup
- Monthly: Check idler alignment in loading zone and any areas prone to mistracking
- 6-monthly: Full idler alignment survey from tail to head; check all pulley lagging wear
- After any belt splice: Verify splice squareness before returning to production
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