Re: Calcium Carbide Grinding
Hello Dauna47,
Possibly, ball mill or rod mill may suit your application. I suggest you to refer to the manufacturers of such items. Only thing is that you have small capacity requirement, so you have to locate the suppliers who will be interested for such size.
Regards,
Ishwar G Mulani.
Author of Book : Engineering Science and Application Design for Belt Conveyors.
Advisor / Consultant for Bulk Material Handling System & Issues.
Email : parimul@pn2.vsnl.net.in
Tel.: 0091 (0)20 25882916 ■
Re: Calcium Carbide Grinding
Hello dauna47,
Since your posting has not drawn much response, I have had a look around and see that there is a company not too far away from you that makes machines that will grind calcium carbide at the type of throughput you are seeking. Your sizing requirement is towards the limit of the machine's capability, but it might be possible. Worth asking in any case, I would think.
http://www.mpechicago.com/grinders/
Cheers, ■
Hello Dauna47,
We are currently grinding zeolite at 3 to 4 mtph through a mill we have designed and are manufacturing ourselves. We have ground calcium carbide in the past and it has worked fairly well. We have a number of different mill sizes ranging to 15 mtph. Our mill is very energy effiecent and requires no special foundations. Currently we are grinding the zeolite to under 20 microns. But our mill can easily be adjusted to grind from grit size to under 5 microns. Let me know if you want any additinal informtion.
Thanks
R. Graham ■
Re: Calcium Carbide Grinding
Hello R. Graham,
Yes I would like additional information about your self designed mill to grind calcium carbide.
Thanks.
Andre Daunais, eng.
email: adci@qc.aira.com
Tel: 450-746-7979
Fax: 450-743-0854 ■
Andre Daunais
Andre,
We will contact you with will some more detailed information shortly Have a Happy Holiday.
Thanks Russ ■
Calcium carbide grinding
What would be the best technology to crush/grind calcium carbide (CaC2) from 6-25mm to less than 140 microns? The throughput should be 5 to 6 MTPH. We don't know the relative hardness MOH scale of this product. ■