Guide

How to Choose Coal Conveyor Systems

A selection methodology for coal handling belt conveyor systems: belt width, speed, lift, drive, and auxiliary equipment.

Summary

At a glance

Choosing a coal conveyor system means matching belt width, belt speed, lift profile, and drive arrangement to the required capacity, material properties, and operating environment. The right answer is the system with the lowest total cost of ownership over its expected service life, not just the lowest capital cost.

Step 1: Define capacity and material

Start with required throughput (tph), expected variability, peak rates, and material properties (bulk density, lump size, moisture, abrasiveness). These drive every other decision. For coal, typical bulk density is 0.75–0.95 t/m³; lump size and moisture vary widely with source and processing stage.

Step 2: Select belt width and speed

Belt width must accommodate the largest expected lump (a guideline is 3x the largest lump dimension). Within a given width, capacity scales with belt speed. Higher speeds increase capacity per dollar of conveyor structure but raise belt wear, idler load, and dust generation. Coal conveyors typically run at 2.5–4.0 m/s; long overland conveyors run faster (up to 5+ m/s).

Step 3: Determine lift profile

Belt inclination is limited by material angle of repose. For coal, typical maximum is 18° on flat-troughed belt. Higher lifts use chevron belts, sidewall belts, or pipe conveyors. Long horizontal conveyors are typically less expensive per ton-kilometer than highly inclined ones.

Step 4: Choose belt construction

Steel cord belts are used for long-center, high-tension applications. Fabric belts are used for shorter, lower-tension conveyors. Cover compound is selected for material abrasiveness and operating environment; underground coal mine service requires fire-resistant cover grades.

Step 5: Drive and take-up

Single-head drives are simplest. Multiple drives (head and tail, or head-only with multiple motors) reduce belt tension. Soft-start systems (fluid couplings or VFDs) reduce starting torque. Take-up choice (gravity, screw, hydraulic) depends on conveyor length and required tension control.

Step 6: Integrate auxiliaries

Conveyor selection is not complete without belt cleaners, idler types, dust control, protection devices, and transfer station chute design. These are 'small' items in capital terms but dominate operational performance and maintenance cost.

Step 7: Total cost of ownership

Compare options on TCO over expected life: capital, energy, belt replacement, idler replacement, transfer point maintenance, downtime, and end-of-life decommissioning. Many cheap-capital options have higher TCO than their more expensive alternatives.

Frequently Asked

FAQ

What belt width should I specify for a coal conveyor?

Belt width must accommodate the largest expected lump (rule of thumb: 3x the largest lump dimension) and the required capacity at the chosen belt speed. For a given duty, the belt-width and belt-speed combination is optimized for total cost of ownership.

What is the maximum inclination for a coal conveyor?

Standard troughed coal conveyors are limited to about 18° because of material angle of repose. Higher lifts use chevron-patterned belts, sidewall belts, or pipe conveyors. Inclination is also limited by belt slip on the drive pulley.

How do I choose between steel cord and fabric belt?

Steel cord belts are required for long-center, high-tension conveyors where fabric belt would exceed its tension rating. Fabric belts are simpler and lower-cost for shorter, lower-tension service. The crossover is typically around 600–1,000 m centers depending on lift and capacity.

Should I include redundancy in conveyor selection?

Redundancy depends on availability requirements. Power plant coal handling typically uses parallel conveyors at critical points (e.g. bunker feed) so that any single failure does not stop coal supply. Mining and preparation plant conveyors are usually single-line because batch operation can absorb short outages.

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