big red 211
Active member
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2009
- Messages
- 25
Could an old drier be used as a ball machine? I read somewere that they use 8lb balls in the real ones. But what about some smaller ones?
leavemealone said:Ryan,
In big reds defense,hoke doesn't address ball mills in her book.I have read a lot of what ammen has written and have never seen it in any of his material either.
Johnny
Never said I had read it all.I have read a lot of what ammen has written
Page 12? The number of his books that have been published are in teens.Ammen mentions it on page 12, and on the pages near are about other types of crushers.
big red 211 said:Could an old drier be used as a ball machine? I read somewere that they use 8lb balls in the real ones. But what about some smaller ones?
If you've ever driven a vehicle that didn't have enough power to do the job you desire, maybe my comments will make sense. Sort of reminds me of my youth, when one buddy had a Willys that couldn't make it up the steep road leading to an old mine, where we used to go salvage copper. By sharp contrast, my other buddy had a LaSalle that walked up with no effort.big red 211 said:I figured I'd ask since you can get those for cheap or free some times. If I used some 2-3lb balls instead I didn't know if that would actually crush everything. While searching I found a post were a guy made a ball mill out of scrap stuff from a junk yard... And at a transmission shop I used to work at, they had a tumbler for cleaning the metal plates inside transmissions. Something like that might work too?
All to often, a guy doesn't have time or inclination to do it right, but apparently has all the time in the world to do it over again and again. What I have stated is what works. What you're talking about would make great feed for a Red Green episode.I'd just like to use stuff that is already assembled so I don't have a lot of fab time in making it.
What makes you think that it will hold up? A charge of balls is likely to weigh a few hundred pounds.I figured even if the drum wouldn't hold up then I could get something else to use as a drum that is about the same size and still use everything else from the drier.
How many times? It doesn't have to withstand the impact once or twice, it has to withstand the impact tens of thousands of times per hour. It has to do that without failing. What the hell good is a ball mill that can't take the work it's supposed to do?Heck, I know I can make a drum that can withstand an 8lb ball slamming against it.
Did you notice my comment about Rose's book? Need I say more?I just didn't know at what rpm the drum would need to turn for this.
butcher said:I made a small hammer mill, a Direct current motor, and bridge rectifyer to run off alternating 120 volts, dimmer speed control, 2 arm cam, that lifts the hammer rod, and drops hammer, a steel hammer head, pounds material to powder.
If we "can't discourage all options", then our purpose in being here is lost. I have no intentions of encouraging a concept that is moronic----which this clearly is.Barren Realms 007 said:We can't discourage all options even if we know they will not work properly. You can tell them it won't work and they will still try it to prove you wrong. The option is there it is the users idea to determine if they can put it to use.