"We
had heavy pea soup coming out the other end," is the way Hugh
"Hoot" Jellum describes the discharge from the pumping
system working in his holding pond. Jellum is busy clearing the top
18 feet out of a 17-acre pond that has been filled with years of
clay, mud, sand, and fines washed from a silica mining operation.
Jellum is the veteran operations manager for Wedron Silica Co., in
Wedron, Illinois.
After
a number of unproductive attempts with other equipment, Jellum kept
looking for something to do a better job. The pumping equipment he
tried previously pumped too much water and not enough solids. His
search led him to the IMS Versi-DredgeŽ which promised a higher concentration
of solids and a more economical operation.
"They
lived up to their word," says Doug Gerner, director of
production for the million ton per year operation. "The
VERSI DREDGE® pumps anywhere from 20 percent to 65 percent
solids depending on the type of material it's working in."
Among
the features that led Wedron Silica to purchase the Versi-Dredge was
the manner in which the cutterhead works. As Hoot Jellum puts it,
"We get real heavy slurry because of the way the cutter head
works with the pump. It's almost as though they're one unit. The
cutterhead rips into the clay, mud, sand, and it goes right into the
shroud. The pump is sitting right there in the back and it takes the
material up, and out and it is gone. Nothing gets away."
Jellum
says that he's been working the dredge for about 350 hours and
hasn't had trouble. "We've been down to twenty feet and we've
been in places where the material was a foot above the pontoons, and
we still moved it out of there."
Jellum
expects to work on the pond well into summer. "We shut down
when the freeze sets in, then we'll get back to work sometime in the
spring." he says.
The
material from the holding pond is being used to refill one of the
mining pits. This means the dredge may be as much as 900 feet from
where the material is being discharged into the hole. Jellum said
they have been pumping that distance with ease and that the material
spews out the other end in a good heavy stream.
The
dredge is also designed for easy mobility. It is compact and lightweight
so that it is easy to move through a pond and quick to turn around
and make another sweep.
"We
have been able to set the system in one position and pump for three
weeks. The pump is so powerful that it draws the material right into
it and keeps pumping a high ratio of solids." said Jellum.
He
recalls another time when the pump was in almost solid sand so that
the only water that was available had to come in from the bank and
over the top of the shroud. "It still moved that sand," he
says.
Source:
World Dredging Mining & Construction
FOR
MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:
Ryan Horton
IMS Marketing Director
Ph (913) 642-5100
Fax (913) 642-5119