Tag Archives: Mill Relining Machine

Mill relining system major RME celebrates 20 years in South America

OEM RUSSELL MINERAL EQUIPMENT (RME) is celebrating its 20th anniversary in South America, highlighting its ongoing deep connection and commitment to the region.

RME says it is seizing the milestone to express its gratitude to the team members, customers and suppliers who made RME the region’s most trusted OEM of mill relining technologies.

RME’s history in South America dates to 1996 with the export of the first RUSSELL Mill Relining Machine (MRM) to the region. With a steady stream of technology installations in the years that followed, RME established a direct presence in the region in 2004 to better serve its growing customer base.

Today, RME has five dedicated RME Regional Service Centres in Latin America and its equipment operates on 77 Latin American mine sites across Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Mexico, Panama and Peru.

RME Founder, Executive Chairman and Chief Engineer, Dr John Russell, described South America as a cornerstone of RME’s operations.

Dr Russell said: “From the arrival of the first RUSSELL MRM on the continent in 1996, the opening of our regional service centre in Chile in 2004, and the opening of offices in Peru and Brazil in 2021 and 2022, respectively, RME has invested, and continues to invest in building our capacity and customer delivery capabilities in the region.

“Latin America is home to some of RME’s oldest and most loyal customers, with well-maintained RUSSELL MRMs routinely exceeding 20 years of field operation. An unwavering dedication to precision engineering and quality manufacturing ensures our mill relining systems perform optimally, translating to a lower total cost of ownership and higher return on investment for our customers across Latin America and beyond.

“With more than 100 RME employees in Latin America, the region is also home to RME’s largest cohort of specialised local technical staff, outside Australia. We are committed to transferring our knowledge and skills to benefit career development of local employees, as well as their families and communities, while ultimately improving the safety of our customers’ reline crews and mill relining productivity. As we celebrate 20 years in South America, and also approach 40 years since RME was founded, we look to the future and remain deeply committed to expanding our business in Latin America.”

The first commercial adoption of THUNDERBOLT SKYWAY, RME’s technology that roboticises the operation of THUNDERBOLT Recoilless Hammer for safer and faster worn liner knock-in, was in Panama.

Securing this initial site in 2019 was an important step in commercialising RME’s advanced relining methods and technologies. Not only did the company gain valuable insights for its innovation program, but this installation demonstrated to industry that it’s possible to eliminate fatal risk and move workers out of the line of fire during mill relining operations, RME says.

Dr Russell said: “RME’s Latin American customers have been early adopters of products from our world-first, award-winning RME Advanced Technology Mill Relining System that ultimately allows mill operators to relocate crews to work outside the mill during liner exchange and achieve step-change improvements in safety and relining speed.

“Thanks to their safety leadership, over 30 relines globally, utilising various products from the RME Advanced Technology Mill Relining System, have demonstrated the system’s broad applicability to diverse mine sites, especially in Latin America which operates some of the world’s largest mills, long-life mines and high-altitude sites.

“The region continues to work at the forefront of advanced safety and automation technology adoption with growing interest and investment in the world’s best safety technologies.”

RME heralds ‘world-first’ semi-automated mill relining system deployment

Mill relining systems manufacturer RUSSELL MINERAL EQUIPMENT (RME) has deployed what it says is the world’s first semi-automated mill relining system, delivering significant safety and commercial outcomes for its customer and the wider industry.

The reduction in mill relining risks and shutdown duration was achieved through a combination of: roboticising RME’s mature and proven technologies; compatible liner and bolt design; and strong collaboration and change management with site management and reline crews.

RME says its automated system addresses the two main phases of mill relining: worn liner removal and new liner placement, and enables the completion of these necessary maintenance processes without anyone inside the mill. This system was developed and implemented in close collaboration with some of RME’s existing customers, including PT Freeport Indonesia (PT-FI).

RME Founder, Executive Chairman and Chief Engineer, Dr John Russell, describes the new paradigm for fast, automated mill relines as the ultimate in safety and improved commercial performance for concentrators.

He said: “RME’s goal has been to enable our customers to reline mills with no one inside, providing them with remarkable safety and efficiency benefits. By eliminating human-machine interaction, we can speed up the machines and relining processes, consistently and repeatably. This advanced capability is now a reality.

“We are grateful to our customers, and to our liner and bolt technology partners, for their shared commitment to achieving these results. I would also like to recognise and thank our team at RME who has made our shared vision a reality.”

The results achieved to date can be attributed to RME’s systems engineering approach, it says. Safety inside and outside the mill was the priority and every step was carefully reviewed according to RME’s 24 Steps to Mill Relining Standard.

“We understood from our 35-plus years as an OEM that to safely automate mill relining, we would need to consider the many interdependent tasks across the entire process,” Russell added.

“The engineering result is now a tightly-integrated system of advanced modular technologies that automate manual repetitive tasks, eliminate risks and speeds-up relining.”

Consequently, RME’s automated system enables a staged implementation whereby upgrades happen within planned maintenance windows over multiple reline events. This ensures customers will not experience additional costly mill downtime scenarios.

One major advantage of RME’s semi-automated mill relining system is that its underpinning technologies are well-established and well-used by the industry, according to the company.

Dr Peter Rubie, who held the role of Chief Engineer at RME until 2019 and is a Non-Executive Director at RME, played a key role in the development of the company’s automation technologies.

“Mining can be conservative when adopting new technologies, due to economic risk,” Dr Rubie said. “For some of our customers, even one hour of downtime can cost upwards of $200,000 of production. We can avoid these impacts by automating existing proven systems. The beauty of RME’s mill relining technologies ecosystem is that the elements are modular and future-proofed. Miners of all sizes can deploy the base components and then incorporate additional automation steps at their own pace.”

The centrepiece of RME’s semi-automated mill relining system – the RUSSELL 7 Model R AutoMotion™ Mill Relining Machine (MRM) – is a highly advanced configuration of the industry’s most adopted 7-axis liner exchange machine, the RUSSELL 7 MRM.

It is complemented by THUNDERBOLT SKYWAY, a semi-automated knock-in system used on the exterior of the mill. Operational since 2020 at sites in Central America and Indonesia, SKYWAY is well-proven, the company says. This technology is now also available as a portable lift-in solution called THUNDERBOLT SKYPORT. It is another automation of RME’s established technology that increases asset utilisation by being sharable between mills onsite.

These systems, working together with INSIDEOUT™ Technology tooling and compatible liner and bolt design, can grab knocked-in worn liners off the shell or from the charge, and place new liners against the shell with millimetre precision and without personnel working inside the mill, according to the company. The securing of liners, nuts and bolts from the mill’s exterior can also now be achieved using RME BOLTBOSS.

RME has been collaborating with customers across several sites to progressively automate mill relining, including upskilling their customers’ local crews.

Analysis of historical reline shutdown data using conventional relining methods, compared with filmed data using some, but not all, of RME’s automated mill relining technology suite, reports a 65% risk reduction for activities inside the mill and 30% productivity uplift for a 38 ft SAG mill, RME says.

Following a staged implementation, PT-FI recently completed its first reline using the combination of THUNDERBOLT SKYWAY and the RUSSELL 7 Model R AutoMotion MRM. While the performance data is currently being analysed, early indications point to an even greater reduction in risk and increase in productivity than was originally targeted.

Director Metallurgy and Strategic Planning at Freeport-McMoRan, Dr John Wilmot, summed up the outcomes FCX is seeing as safer and faster mill relining at the recent SAG 2023 conference in Vancouver, Canada.

“PT-FI Indonesia has largely removed crew from inside the mill as we reline,” he said. “While there are still a few residual activities where we need to enter, such as wash-down, we’re executing relines faster and safer than before. Mill relining is no longer on the critical path.

“RME’s modular systems approach enabled us to progressively implement the technology, which meant we could quantify the safety and productivity improvements at each reline event, even as the new technology was being deployed.

“The staged implementation also provided an opportunity to create strong buy-in from our reline crew. In our experience, when the crew is part of the optimisation journey, the change program is infinitely more successful. At PT-FI Indonesia, our reline crew has now taken full ownership of the process.

“Leveraging RME’s equipment and methodologies, as well as the compatible liner and bolt designs, our crew has experienced the difference that automation can make. They’ve found it to be safer and faster, and they won’t go back to conventional methods. We’re incredibly proud of their work. By collaborating closely with all the stakeholders involved, we are engineering the risk out of mill relining.

“We believe RME’s collaborative and staged approach can serve as a model for the mineral processing industry. It is already achieving step-changes in safety and mill availability for our customers and we’re excited to see the impact it may have industry-wide.”

Dr Russell concluded: “We have now completed more than 30 real world relines using the various products of RME’s Advanced Technology suite. It gives me the confidence to present our system as the safest solution for our industry. And the data we’re seeing from the 30-plus relines, gives me the confidence to state that this system better for productivity.

“The transition to net zero requires an enormous increase in the minerals that are essential to the decarbonisation of our economies. We are delighted to be able to play a part in safely speeding up the production of those minerals. We’ve achieved these results in partnership with our customers, using the same pioneering mindset with which we’ve approached the past 35 years.”

RME supplies Northern Star’s Thunderbox mine with 500th Mill Relining Machine

In what it says is a major milestone, Russell Mineral Equipment (RME) has designed and completed production of its 500th Mill Relining Machine (MRM) for Australia-based gold producer Northern Star Resources Ltd.

This custom-made RUSSELL MRM will be accepted by Northern Star at a ceremony at RME’s global headquarters in Toowoomba, Queensland, this month. This MRM will service Northern Star’s new SAG mill at its Thunderbox project in the Goldfields of Western Australia.

RME and Northern Star began their relationship at the Kanowna Belle Operations, some 30 years ago with the purchase of RUSSELL MRM number five (MRM005). Northern Star owns six RUSSELL MRMs, including the 400th RUSSELL MRM, commissioned in 2018 at Kanowna Belle. Thismachine replaced a RUSSELL MRM that had been in operation at Kanowna Belle for 25 years.

The 500th RUSSELL MRM is a RUSSELL 7-axis, 6,000-kg capacity machine. The RUSSELL 7 is RME’s signature model sold globally, and this unit also comes with advanced RME INSIDEOUT™ technologies. These proprietary new technologies, developed by RME, enable placement and removal of grinding mill liners without any crew working on the charge inside the mill, greatly reducing exposure of personnel to significant hazards, the company says.

Since the introduction of the very first RUSSELL 7-axis MRM in 1992, traditional mill relining times have been quartered and many health and safety hazards have been eliminated, RME says.
Chief Customer Officer, Cherylyn Russell, says RME is a proud supplier to the hard-rock mining and mineral processing industry, primarily those processing gold and copper.

“This milestone is a chance to acknowledge the technology and safety advances of the RME Mill Relining System that enable giant grinding mills to get back to work quicker after regular relining,” she said. “Mill relining is the most specialised maintenance task in the mineral concentrator process and often dictates the length of shutdowns. RME’s innovative, customised, robust equipment helps increase mine site profitability, all while improving the safety of the working environment.”