Real mine conveying problems. Proven engineering solutions. Our specialists have resolved these exact issues in mines across 50+ countries.
A conveyor belt running off-center is one of the most common and costly problems in mine operations. It causes accelerated edge wear, material spillage along the entire conveyor length, structural frame damage, and in severe cases, complete belt destruction. Unplanned belt replacements from mistracking can cost $50,000–$500,000+ per incident.
We supply precision-manufactured troughing idlers (ISO 1537) with tight dimensional tolerances that ensure consistent belt support across the full width. Our self-aligning training idlers detect belt deviation and automatically apply corrective force. Combined with properly centered loading chutes, rubber skirting, and correct take-up tension maintenance, belt mistracking is permanently resolved.
Screen panel blinding occurs when wet, sticky, or near-aperture-size particles lodge in the screen openings. In mining operations with high moisture content — iron ore, copper ore, coal fines — blinding can reduce screening efficiency from 95% to below 20% within minutes, costing thousands of dollars per hour in lost production.
Our polyurethane screen panels flex slightly with each vibration cycle, constantly changing the aperture shape and ejecting trapped particles — the self-cleaning effect. The PU surface is naturally slippery, preventing adhesion. We select aperture size 10–15% larger than target cut size to compensate for near-size particles. For extremely sticky materials, we supply specially designed anti-blinding panels with tapered apertures that widen from top to bottom.
Material spillage at conveyor loading zones and transfer points is a universal problem in bulk material handling. It creates unsafe walkways, clogs conveyor structures, causes premature belt wear from trapped material between belt and return rollers, and results in thousands of tonnes of lost product annually. In dusty environments it also creates serious air quality issues.
We supply UHMWPE and rubber impact bars that support the belt at the loading zone, preventing downward deflection and material rebound. Our rubber skirting systems seal the belt sides across the full loading length. For high-drop transfer points, rock box chute liners slow the material before it contacts the belt. These solutions eliminate 95%+ of spillage.
Standard conveyor belts used for conveying sharp, angular, or highly abrasive materials like iron ore, granite, basalt, coke, and foundry slag wear out 3–5x faster than their rated service life. This leads to unplanned replacements, production shutdowns, and maintenance budgets far exceeding projections.
Our high abrasion-resistant belts use a proprietary compound with wear loss ≤90mm³ (DIN 53516/ISO 4649) compared to 120–150mm³ for standard belts. With tensile strength ≥18MPa and elongation ≥400%, these belts absorb impact without cracking. We also recommend correct top cover thickness (6–20mm) and proper chute design to reduce drop height and material velocity at impact.
In high-tonnage ore processing, steel transfer chutes, hoppers, and bins can wear through in as little as 3–6 months when handling sharp, heavy ore. Emergency welding and plate replacement causes unplanned downtime and safety risks. Annual chute maintenance costs frequently reach six-figure sums for large operations.
Installing rubber or polyurethane liner panels on all impact and wear surfaces transforms chute maintenance from emergency repairs to planned annual maintenance. Rubber liners (20–50mm thick) absorb impact energy through elasticity — they deform and recover rather than being cut through. PU liners (60–90 Shore A) offer superior performance in wet/slurry conditions and for sliding abrasion. We supply bolt-on liner kits custom-sized for your chute geometry.
Our engineers have seen it all. Send us photos and a description of your issue — we'll diagnose the root cause and recommend the right solution within 24 hours.