Posts Tagged ‘mining’

Maintenance Operations at Spokane Steel Foundry

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009

When I took over the maintenance shop at Spokane Industries Steel Foundry Division in March of 2008 I knew it was going to be an experience that I couldn’t begin to imagine. It was a blank slate. With support from great ownership and a good core management group we could do anything we set our mind to. This wasn’t the first steel foundry that I have had an opportunity to help improve but I was hoping that we could be so effective that it might just be my last.

Spokane Industries Steel Foundry Divisions Maintenance Department is somewhat immature from an organizational stand point, but we have the fortitude and the tools in place to get from good to great in a timely fashion and in an orderly manor.

Spokane Industries Maintenance Department personnel are in a time of transition and change. And we all know how difficult that can be, especially with maintenance guys. I know because I am one.

We are starting our passage from reactive to proactive maintenance with a good base. eMaint Enterprises LLC furnishes our Computerized Maintenance Management System (CMMS) support and they do an outstanding job. We have utilized their system to relocate and catalog over 3800 part numbers, tracked all of our critical to success metrics, built a purchasing platform, and we are even starting to benefit from mean time between failure data and work order history.

Using Total Productive Maintenance (TPM), the leadership of the department has started to turn preventative maintenance over to autonomous exercises, allowing specialized maintenance to perform detailed inspections to ward off catastrophic failure scenarios. We have been able to reduce inventory while still feeling confident we will have the parts on hand for scheduled maintenance once the inspection process reveals the useful life of the component to be nearly expired.

We have over two centuries of maintenance experience amoungst electricians and millwrights and I feel extremely lucky to have inherited the talent we have in this shop. Our task is now to get that knowledge documented and available to the younger staff members and to get the veterans utilizing lean maintenance techniques to determine Root Cause (RCA) during the repair process of failed machinery. We have already implemented several action items that have eliminated root cause of failures and moved some dollars right to the bottom line. The largest hurdle here is that we have had virtually no early machine management, and some of the equipment has been around a while.

Although we have an uncertain economic future and many challenges to face we are dedicated and unwavering in our quest for excellence and continuous improvement. After all, the mother of invention is necessity, and our necessity is to do more with less through increased efficiencies.

Production Manager for Spokane Steel Foundry Billy Newman states, “The opportunity to achieve success is great with Spokane Industries Maintenance Department and I believe the individuals within the maintenance department are up to the challenge. We have great leadership at the shift level and the momentum is in our favor. In my opinion we are poised at this point to attack the heavy hitters, and really start to benefit our internal customers.”

The road is long, but with facilitation from management, and support at the operator level we can make Predictive Maintenance a reality, and help Spokane Industries continue as a world class supplier of steel and iron castings.

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Dimensional Verification of Steel and Iron Castings

Friday, February 20th, 2009

One key benefit of steel and iron castings is the ability to be formed into complex, organic shapes that are not easily duplicated in fabricated, or even forged parts. Because of this, castings can achieve significant cost and labor savings, but these complex shapes can be quite difficult to inspect with traditional dimensional inspection techniques. The typical dimensional testing toolbox begs for a few specialty items to complete the task adequately.

In addition to the complex shapes that are common for castings, a steel or iron cast surface will be textured by the molding material that the molten metal was poured into, typically bonded sand. This surface texture can affect the repeatability and accuracy of the inspection if care is not taken during the measurement process.

One important issue that complicates the dimensional inspection of iron and steel castings is the draft angle that is required on patterns that are used in sand molds. Draft angles are a manufacturing requirement of the sand mold process that allows the pattern to be drawn back out of the sand after the impression is made. These draft angles are rarely shown on casting blueprints and solid models but are usually noted on the prints as: Draft not to exceed 1.5 Degrees, or something similar.

The dimensional inspection of castings has traditionally relied on the standard hand-tools that reside in most inspectors toolboxes: height gauges, calipers, radius gauges, snap gauges, tape measures, etc. These hand tools continue to play an important role in the inspection process, but, because of the unique issues with castings as noted above, they cant always be relied upon for the complete dimensional inspection that may be required. In addition to standard hand tools, Spokane Industries uses both a traditional, table-based Mitutoyo CMM (Coordinate Measuring Machine) that has a 24x24x18 working volume and a Faro-Arm with an 8-foot sphere working volume.

The traditional CMM is primarily used for the measurement of smaller, investment castings produced in our lost-wax facility as well as for the castings that are further processed by machining. The Faro Arm is a portable, articulating-arm CMM that allows for much more complete and detailed measurements than would be possible with either hand tools or the traditional CMM. Spokane Industries uses a Faro Arm that has an accuracy of plus or minus .003 of an inch. Although this accuracy is not as precise as a standard, table-based CMM it is more than acceptable for the tolerances usually applied to iron and steel castings.

The Faro Arms measurement software contains all the standard measurement tools that are common in most measurement software packages: plane, line, distance, circle, etc., but the Faro Arm gives the dimensional inspector the ability to digitally trace the contours of the casting and compare the CAD data directly against the trace. This tracing capability of the Faro Arm is accomplished by moving the tip of the arm against the feature of the casting that needs measuring.

The software will record the path of the tip as digital points or small, stitched-line segments. These points or line segments can then be measured in the software. Because of this free-form recording of the actual shape of the casting within the software, the dimensional inspector is able to record the true shape of the casting that can be measured, viewed on-screen, emailed for review, and rechecked even if the casting is no longer present. These features allow Spokane Industries quicker, more accurate dimensional inspections of castings that can be communicated with our customers via traditional dimensional reports, CAD/actual casting scan overlay, or a combination of both.

David Jolin, Quality Assurance Manager at Spokane Industries states, Another advantage of this scanning capability is to reverse-engineer existing castings that may not have a blueprint or cad-data. This is especially helpful if a customer has only a casting to provide to Spokane Industries to copy. Spokane Industries can scan the casting with the Faro Arm, generate a blueprint and CAD model and submit these back to the customer for review and approval. Once approved, Spokane Industries would then create the pattern for the molding operation, and then pour a first part sample. This sample can then be confirmed back to the created and approved blueprint, as well as against the scan of the original part.

The realm of dimensional inspection has moved far beyond the days of hand-written dimensional reports listing the results to the nearest fraction of an inch. The advancements that computer-aided inspection systems and the digital age have spawned allow us to produce parts and inspect them with more precision and detail than ever before. This increased detail results in a better understanding of the casting process that encourages engineers to design even more complex castings. As customer expectations grow, so does the ability of our QA department to meet and exceed them.

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Crusher Wear Parts

Friday, February 20th, 2009

Spokane Industries is a world leader in the manufacturing of high quality wear parts for the impact rock crusher industry. Spokane Industries has for over 40 years been developing new and better alloys, processes and controls to improve product quality consistency and wear life year after year. We have demonstrated a long term commitment of excellence to this industry and specifically for this important product line.

Bob Tenold, current Board Chairman and then Chief Metallurgist for developing new alloys for these applications in the 60s, 70s and 80s observed, Spokane Industries made a commitment in the early years of the impact crusher machines to develop and continuously improve alloys for wear parts. We also recognized that this passion for excellence can never stop, so our current team of engineers and metallurgists are continuing this commitment.

In the business of impact crusher wear parts alloys, the phrase one size fits all is a misnomer! The very unique application of each crusher site must be understood before a correct match of machine and metallurgy can be made. Included in the analysis is type of machine running, type of rock to be crushed, is the material dry or wet, speed the rotor or table is running, size and volume of incoming material, and how many hammers or shoes are configured just to mention a few of the variables. The sales and engineering specialists at Spokane Industries have years of experience with these impact machines and applications and can assist the operators with the best parts for their unique operation.

Don Riley, Spokane Industries Wear Parts Sales, began his career building vertical shaft impact machines. He knows and understands how they work and what the strengths and weaknesses are with the different manufacturers. His knowledgeable recommendations have been extremely beneficial to Spokanes customer base as they assess the best parts for each application. As Don says, No two machines or applications are the same. Spokanes history of matching the right parts with each machine has saved our customers money and reduced downtime which creates real value. Thats what we bring to the operator.

For more information, please visit us at www.spokaneindustries.com or give our Wear Parts Sales Team a call at 1-800-541-3601. Youll be glad you did!

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