Sandvik intelligent trucks automate haulage with AutoMine

MEq
By MEq July 11, 2017 20:11

Sandvik intelligent trucks automate haulage with AutoMine

Sandvik is introducing new intelligent mining trucks for automated haulage, delivering tangible benefits in safety, productivity and profitability. Paired with AutoMine Trucking, mines can increase haulage production by as much as 30 percent.

The new Sandvik TH551i and Sandvik TH663i trucks are designed for intelligent mine production. The high-capacity trucks are safer, efficient and easy to maintain with low cost per ton. An integrated weighing system helps operators ensure a full payload every trip.

The new trucks essentially deliver increased production with no increase in fixed costs. Multi-machine control and improved operating discipline can reduce operating costs by as much as 50 percent. Better availability and improved performance mean that mines can achieve the same production volume with fewer trucks.
The addition of four to eight productive hours each day, which otherwise would be wasted for blast clearance, can increase production by as much as 30 percent compared with conventional trucks.

“By removing the operator from the truck and running the entire trucking loop autonomously, mines can achieve significant operational cost savings and efficiency gains that are unheard of using traditional current underground trucking methods,” says Mark Ryan, Product Line Manager Trucks at Sandvik Mining and Rock Technology. “We’ve proven these benefits with automation projects at mines from Canada to South Africa.

“Our focus areas in automating these trucks were the safety of operators and other personnel,” says Jarkko Ruokojärvi, Product Line Manager Equipment Automation at Sandvik Mining and Rock Technology. “We’re relocating operators from underground to the surface and isolating the automation area, as well as reducing decline safety hazards caused by operator fatigue.”

The new evolution in AutoMine Trucking is decline haulage, which enables high-level utilization and improved productivity also in declines for underground hard rock miners who use ramp haulage. This helps enable several additional daily hours of haulage with automation. Haulage-level automation has been in operation since 2005 at Petra Diamonds’ Finsch mine in South Africa, and now the same proven technology is also available for decline ramp applications.

The new intelligent trucks have inbuilt data collection capabilities, ensuring all information can be visualized at any time. Every load is analyzed and high speed continuous production in autonomous mode enables higher utilization and extended equipment lifetime.

Sandvik AutoMine TH663i

MEq
By MEq July 11, 2017 20:11