Conference Proceedings
The AusIMM Proceedings 1923
Conference Proceedings
The AusIMM Proceedings 1923
Some Calculations Dealing with Mine Timber
ONE of the phases of mining wide ore-bodies, such as are found in Broken Hill, is the laying-out and design of the sill floor gangway timber, When, in the above operation, a detail has to be repeated frequently, it is desirable in the interests of efficiency that that detail should be standardized as far as possible. Before arriving at a standard design e.g., a crosscut layout-it would seem necessary to compare its strength with some other unit of timber and see that the general design is at least as strong as the unit that has been taken for comparative purposes, In these notes no attempt is made to calculate the stresses to which timber underground is subjected, but merely to draw a comparison between the relative strengths of the various cross sections of timber in common use underground.It has been assumed for the purposes of comparison that the milling exerts pressure in a vertical plane only, and is uniformly distributed over any area. A beam supported at both ends, and with a uniformly distributed load, has the maximum bending moment at a point midway between the points of support, and equals- WL2 8 where W = load per unit length. L = distance between points of support.The bending moment also equals M-, where y M = modulus of rupture of the material in question. I = moment of inertia of the section of the beam about a given axis.Y = distance of extreme fibre from that axis. WL2. I The formula -8- = MY- only holds good until the elastic limit...
Contributor(s):
H F Pearson
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- Published: 1922
- PDF Size: 0.361 Mb.
- Unique ID: P_PROC1923_0285