Suddenly Experiencing Puff-Backs in AHS S130 Coal Gun
- hotblast1357
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Mine doesn’t have much for fines... it is handled a lot less though probably being a TT load.
- McGiever
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*Keepaneyeonit* (Barry) had that experience with stove size he picked up from Lehigh and was loaded with a FEL there off of a ground pile.
- Rob R.
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That is likely because it came from the stockpile, and not the sizing plant. I have always requested coal from the sizing plant, and it has always been free of fines. Your dealer should do the same.lsayre wrote: ↑Sat. Jan. 12, 2019 9:59 amOne thing I can report is that my load of Lehigh pea has leagues more dust and fines than I've ever experienced with Blaschak. A guess would be somewhere between 5 and 10 times more. Each shovel full is loaded with fines. The stuff looks like big rig trucks ran over it and pulverized it.
- hotblast1357
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I also request off the belt.
Our first load was very clean, pretty much zero fines... it came straight off the belt, had quite a bit of water in it though..
This second load came from the pile.. it was dry, but has some fines in it.. apparently the belt was down so they had to load from the pile..
You either pay for the water, or burn the fines..
- hotblast1357
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- CoalJockey
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You guys don’t have a brand problem (Blaschak, Lehigh, etc) so much as it is the way that it is being handled between the breaker and yourself. We have never loaded coal directly out of the breaker onto one of our trucks that was not top quality and free of fines. You cannot believe how intense the washing and screening process is and most of the time as the coal is being funneled from the storage pocket inside the breaker to the loading chute it is washed and screened one last time just as it goes over the sideboard of the truck. We NEVER buy anthracite coal loaded from a stockpile unless it is a dire emergency, thus ensuring we have a clean product coming to our yard. After the coal is dumped, it is not handled again until it is loaded for the end customer. Any fines created as the loader bucket scrapes over the blacktop are swept away by hand and removed as the loader works through the pile.
When coal is taken from the breaker to the bagger it is handled, and as it is bagged and stacked it is handled again. I’m sure things get shaken a bit as the tow-motor moves it in the warehouse and onto the truck for transport. If it goes to a dealer before it gets to you, it gets moved around and shaken again from one truck to another. Each time you do this you create action that can cause coal to become finer.
My whole point is that the more you handle it, the finer it becomes. It is not any fault of a particular brand of coal but different seams may also have different binding characteristics as well that may help to keep it together. This can vary from time to time within the same company depending on current mining and blending practices.
I read all the time on here of varying results from bagged coal as far as fines... some of you are able to do very well with it. The ones that do not from time to time I honestly believe it has nothing to do with the breaker that the coal came from.
If you can buy coal directly out of the breaker and have it delivered straight to you... if your property is the first place it hits the ground, you can be ensured you will be getting the highest quality load possible.
Sorry to write an essay but I have wanted to address that for months now... not intended to be at your expense Larry.
When coal is taken from the breaker to the bagger it is handled, and as it is bagged and stacked it is handled again. I’m sure things get shaken a bit as the tow-motor moves it in the warehouse and onto the truck for transport. If it goes to a dealer before it gets to you, it gets moved around and shaken again from one truck to another. Each time you do this you create action that can cause coal to become finer.
My whole point is that the more you handle it, the finer it becomes. It is not any fault of a particular brand of coal but different seams may also have different binding characteristics as well that may help to keep it together. This can vary from time to time within the same company depending on current mining and blending practices.
I read all the time on here of varying results from bagged coal as far as fines... some of you are able to do very well with it. The ones that do not from time to time I honestly believe it has nothing to do with the breaker that the coal came from.
If you can buy coal directly out of the breaker and have it delivered straight to you... if your property is the first place it hits the ground, you can be ensured you will be getting the highest quality load possible.
Sorry to write an essay but I have wanted to address that for months now... not intended to be at your expense Larry.
- hotblast1357
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- Coal Size/Type: Lehigh anthracite pea
- Other Heating: air source heat pump, oil furnace
Absolutely agree 100%. As I said in my earlier post, my first bulk load of pea from lehigh was perfect, it was straight off the processing plant belt.CoalJockey wrote: ↑Sun. Jan. 13, 2019 7:57 amYou guys don’t have a brand problem (Blaschak, Lehigh, etc) so much as it is the way that it is being handled between the breaker and yourself. We have never loaded coal directly out of the breaker onto one of our trucks that was not top quality and free of fines. You cannot believe how intense the washing and screening process is and most of the time as the coal is being funneled from the storage pocket inside the breaker to the loading chute it is washed and screened one last time just as it goes over the sideboard of the truck. We NEVER buy anthracite coal loaded from a stockpile unless it is a dire emergency, thus ensuring we have a clean product coming to our yard. After the coal is dumped, it is not handled again until it is loaded for the end customer. Any fines created as the loader bucket scrapes over the blacktop are swept away by hand and removed as the loader works through the pile.
When coal is taken from the breaker to the bagger it is handled, and as it is bagged and stacked it is handled again. I’m sure things get shaken a bit as the tow-motor moves it in the warehouse and onto the truck for transport. If it goes to a dealer before it gets to you, it gets moved around and shaken again from one truck to another. Each time you do this you create action that can cause coal to become finer.
My whole point is that the more you handle it, the finer it becomes. It is not any fault of a particular brand of coal but different seams may also have different binding characteristics as well that may help to keep it together. This can vary from time to time within the same company depending on current mining and blending practices.
I read all the time on here of varying results from bagged coal as far as fines... some of you are able to do very well with it. The ones that do not from time to time I honestly believe it has nothing to do with the breaker that the coal came from.
If you can buy coal directly out of the breaker and have it delivered straight to you... if your property is the first place it hits the ground, you can be ensured you will be getting the highest quality load possible.
Sorry to write an essay but I have wanted to address that for months now... not intended to be at your expense Larry.
Second one couldn’t come off the belt cuz it was down, so it was handled with the loader, and has some fines, no big deal for me, I don’t mind them, it all burns.