Replies
Did You Ever Get An Answer?
Posted on
20. Jun. 2006 - 09:24
let me know please, ORLANDO. ■
Best Regards,George BakerRegional Sales Manager - CanadaTELSMITH IncMequon, WI1-519-242-6664 CellE: (work) [email]gbaker@telsmith.com[/email]E: (home) [email] gggman353@gmail.com[/email]website: [url]www.telsmith.com[/url]Manufacturer of portable, modular and stationary mineral processing equipment for the aggregate and mining industries.
Re: Orlando
Posted on
28. Jul. 2006 - 01:31
Orlando
I guess you have three unbalanced shafts and you want to get them to work on the screen?
Ziggy ■
Ziggy Gregorywww.vibfem.com.au
Counterweighting Sequence
Posted on
28. Jul. 2006 - 02:06
If 3 shafts.......GENERALLY:
1st shaft nearest feed end: load up with heaviest offset position
2nd shaft middle........a little less loadup weight than 1st shaft
3rd shaft discharge end: less than 2nd load up weight
WHY? We generally want to have the most SHAKE at the feed end where the load is the DEEPEST.
When it goes down the length a bit, we need a little less SHAKE and so on.......to the END.
Sequencially yours......George ■
Best Regards,George BakerRegional Sales Manager - CanadaTELSMITH IncMequon, WI1-519-242-6664 CellE: (work) [email]gbaker@telsmith.com[/email]E: (home) [email] gggman353@gmail.com[/email]website: [url]www.telsmith.com[/url]Manufacturer of portable, modular and stationary mineral processing equipment for the aggregate and mining industries.
Orlando
Hello,
I write you from Colombia, at the moment work for a company that has a Vibratory zaranda of 3 Counterweiht and we align them I eat up they advised, but the production put on a little slow and try to graduate the counterweight in way of experiments but I don't work, exists a rules for how to graduate these counterweigth
I am Sorry for my english.
Thank you, Att. Orlando. ■