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Author Topic: A pair of Trev's "Gold ore stampers" in action  (Read 166 times)

St Paul Steam

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A pair of Trev's "Gold ore stampers" in action
« on: November 22, 2020, 12:17:56 pm »
I received these awhile back after eagerly anticipating them from Trevor of Australia.

Bruce, St. Paul Indiana, USA
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classixs

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Re: A pair of Trev's "Gold ore stampers" in action
« Reply #1 on: November 22, 2020, 12:49:44 pm »
They look very elegant, when run at this pace...

Beautiful wellmade accessories, congratulations and thanks for sharing Bruce  :)
Cheers
Jan
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Jim

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Re: A pair of Trev's "Gold ore stampers" in action
« Reply #2 on: November 22, 2020, 04:09:09 pm »
Look and sound great Bruce.
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Jim

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Stoker

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Re: A pair of Trev's "Gold ore stampers" in action
« Reply #3 on: November 22, 2020, 06:46:18 pm »
While I really enjoy the "rhythm" of the timing you currently have the stamps set at, in reality they would have been more evenly spaced around each revolution so as to evenly load the power source driving them. Unless I'm not seeing correctly, it does look like you have all four stamps being lifted at the same time, although not at the same level of lift.

Wonderful that you have gotten a pair of them Bruce, as it was quite common for mills to set them up as individual banks within a larger series of banks. A twenty stamp mill might have four banks of five stamps each, and run all twenty much of the time, but each sub-bank would have individual in-feed chutes and out-feed paths so that any one set of stamps might be shut down for servicing, cleaning the tables or awaiting more ore, or perhaps some particular grade of ore that it's tables were specially adjusted for processing.
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St Paul Steam

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Re: A pair of Trev's "Gold ore stampers" in action
« Reply #4 on: November 22, 2020, 09:06:05 pm »
While I really enjoy the "rhythm" of the timing you currently have the stamps set at, in reality they would have been more evenly spaced around each revolution so as to evenly load the power source driving them. Unless I'm not seeing correctly, it does look like you have all four stamps being lifted at the same time, although not at the same level of lift.
thanks Daniel , I had them set for 2 up @ 2 down at 1st , it is possible set these up
 For anything you desire as they are infinitely adjustable.  :)
Bruce, St. Paul Indiana, USA
"Originality thrives in seclusion free of outside influences beating upon us to cripple the creative mind."
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