GIW Industries, a leader in the design, manufacture, and application of heavy-duty centrifugal slurry pumps, is celebrating success with the recent replacement of a mill discharge pump at an iron ore plant in northern Minnesota, US.
The new MDX 42 wet end achieved 24,000 hours between rebuilds. This fitted seamlessly into the customer’s routine maintenance schedule and doubled the wear life of the competitor’s pump, according to GIW.
“This feat wasn’t GIW’s first interaction with this long-standing customer. The iron ore plant was built using GIW® Minerals LSA pumps in the mid-1970s, and many of these pumps are still in operation,” the company said.
Due to the abrasive materials these discharge pumps process, they must be periodically rebuilt, according to the company. For this particular customer, the optimum mill maintenance schedule is every 8,000 hours, so it’s imperative the customer’s rebuild cycle coordinates with these routine shutdowns, GIW said.
“Over the years, the customer tried several different components to increase the average operating time; they even recently turned to a competitor, who was ultimately able to achieve some additional uptime between rebuilds,” GIW said.
“While this nominal increase in uptime was appealing, it didn’t match the plant’s 8,000-hour maintenance cycle. Thus, the competitor’s solution was rendered worthless.”
During this same period of time, GIW applied its adjustable slurry diverter technology to the cyclone feed services in another area of the plant. This replaced the original LSA-14×16-36 with the MDX-12×14-36 in Gasite® 18G material. This switch greatly increased the average time between rebuilds from 4,000 to 8,000 hours, which corresponded with the plant’s normal outage interval.
Realising this material and timing could be a better fit for its process, the customer approached GIW to see if the same technology could be applied to their mill discharge pumps, according to the company.
“The most important benefit in mineral processing is to maximise production time and minimise maintenance,” says GIW Industries Region Manager Ben Altman. “Longer runs offer a big financial benefit to the customer — uptime is everything!”
In order to achieve maximum uptime for the customer, GIW set its sights on extending the time between rebuilds for the customer’s mill discharge pumps.
GIW worked closely with the customer’s engineering department to trend the mill output, and submitted a proposal for testing the new pump. The MDX 42 with adjustable slurry diverter technology was selected for the job. To increase the wear life even further, GIW added a Gasite 32G high chromium white iron alloy suction liner. The mill also took this opportunity to install a variable frequency drive (VFD) to optimise the pump operating speed feeding the roughers, or magnetic separators.
The results were beyond satisfactory, with the MDX wet end achieving 24,000 hours between rebuilds, GIW said.
“To make the MDX’s performance even more impressive, during the rebuild, the maintenance team discovered that there was still a serviceable thickness remaining,” GIW said. “This indicates that many of the parts could have run even longer.”
This success will lead to more recovered pump wet ends in the plant, and it marks another success in the long-term partnership between the GIW team and this valuable iron ore customer, the company said.