Hydraulic Dredging Systems
In pure hydraulic dredging systems, the digging and lifting force is either pure suction, suction assistance, or entirely. They are best suited to digging relatively small-sized loose material such as sand and gravel, marine shell deposits, mill tailings, and unconsolidated overburden. Hydraulic dredging has also been applied to the mining of deposits containing diamonds, tin, tungsten, niobium-tantalum, titanium, monazite, and rare earths. The digging power of hydraulic systems has been greatly increased by the addition of underwater cutting heads. The cutter suction dredge has a rotary cutting head or other excavating tool for loosening and mixing soil at the face of the mine - hydraulic dredging.
Normally, the dredge is held in place during cutting by a pile called a spud. Winches and wire ropes are used to swing the dredge in an arc around the spud until all the material in the arc has been removed. The dredge is then moved ahead and the process repeated. The cutter suction dredge is most suitable for mining softer deposits where the material is of a relatively low specific gravity or fine particle size for example, in sand and gravel pits, phosphate mines, and various salt deposits - San Nicholas Island Barge Service.
The bucket-wheel dredge is identical to the cutter suction dredge except that a wheel excavator is used in place of the rotary cutter. It is better at excavating harder materials, has better digging characteristics at the bottom of the cut, and traps heavy minerals such as gold or tin that might fall away from the standard cutter. However, it is more expensive and mechanically complex than the cutter suction dredge. Dredges come in many varieties similar to those used to mine placer deposits see above Dredging. Being a continuous process, bucket-ladder dredging can produce at high rates, depending on bucket size, power, and digging conditions. Dredges of this type have been used successfully all over the world for mining gold, tin, and platinum placers as well as diamond deposits. Their offshore use has been limited to gold and tin. The hydraulic suction dredge has been mainly used by mining companies to remove overburden from ore deposits. For more information please visit our site https://www.Pacificmaritimegroup.com/
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