Continuous unloading on LKAB’s new underground rail haulage level (1365m) in Kiruna

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  • Опубликовано: 25 окт 2015
  • Unloading process (completely automated and manless): SCHALKE’s 108t-mining-locomotive is driving with twenty-one 17m³ bottom dumping cars from NMT (up to 1.500t in total) driverless using Bombardier’s Interflo150 system through NMT’s bottom dumping station

Комментарии • 161

  • @robc.5745
    @robc.5745 3 года назад +26

    The people that develop these automated systems never cease to amaze me.

    • @bmck5002
      @bmck5002 Год назад

      Not trying to be a smart ass. But 1+1 always equals 2. When a system is found that works in rhythm. It lasts forever. The system may be a math problem that takes less than a minute to solve. Keyword: system

  • @marcusgault9909
    @marcusgault9909 5 лет назад +32

    A Very simple system, BUT! it still took me a few seconds to figure out what was happening and why, in this ingenously simple foolproof design. KUDOS!

  • @madyogi6164
    @madyogi6164 2 года назад +8

    Brilliant way of doing things fast!

  • @daiq9
    @daiq9 5 лет назад +15

    Totally awesome video!!! Hypnotic!!!

  • @proraptor4146
    @proraptor4146 5 лет назад +16

    That was the coolest thing I've ever seen. Very clever

  • @tlongworth19
    @tlongworth19 5 лет назад +18

    It's simple but not too simple. This definatly cuts down on fuel bills and cuts down worker time with offloading. Instead of pulling pins from the bins to offload or having to operate a separate machine to offload makes a huge huge difference in the mining industry.

    • @skunkjobb
      @skunkjobb 2 месяца назад

      "Cut down on fuel bills". It's actually an electric locomotive so cut down on the electricity bill then. You can't see any overhead line and that's because it's a side mounted contact rail instead with 759 V DC, about the same that is used in many subways. It's also driverless.

  • @TheKurtsPlaceChannel
    @TheKurtsPlaceChannel 3 года назад +1

    Great video. Thanks for posting this. Have a nice day.

  • @c_l_b3744
    @c_l_b3744 Год назад +3

    Schalke: Do you want a railway or a conveyor belt?
    LKAB: Yes.

  • @gavinomeara
    @gavinomeara 2 года назад +2

    Well that’s just amazing

  • @timearegames5492
    @timearegames5492 6 лет назад +6

    You have to see the system in real life... Its much more impressive when u see it in real life... i was there in juli and it was so nice

  • @jackkilduff7160
    @jackkilduff7160 6 лет назад +4

    neat idea

  • @petter5721
    @petter5721 6 лет назад +1

    Nice system!

  • @TheBunkerdog
    @TheBunkerdog 5 лет назад +3

    Great design awesome 👏

  • @rosewhite---
    @rosewhite--- 5 лет назад +14

    the cars only carry 15tons so bottom dump is practical.

  • @atzonaftaniel4798
    @atzonaftaniel4798 5 лет назад +3

    I have no idea what I just watched but it was entertaining though.

    • @darkwolf4434
      @darkwolf4434 4 года назад +1

      LKAB is Sweden's biggest mining Company and what you saw was a train dumping ore

  • @zeuserrikkian4475
    @zeuserrikkian4475 2 года назад

    480p looks really good! 🙂

  • @cmac9029
    @cmac9029 5 лет назад +1

    That’s cool!

  • @NeoDerGrose
    @NeoDerGrose 7 лет назад +11

    How does it work when the locomotive goes over the dumping station? Are those wheels at the side powered?

    • @kristoffer816
      @kristoffer816 7 лет назад +2

      the locomotive got so heavy wagons so the train will be pushed over

    • @NeoDerGrose
      @NeoDerGrose 7 лет назад +2

      Interesting. I only know that kind of operation from container terminals where electric trains roll through a section without overhead wire. In this case it's because of the cranes loading and unloading the train from above.

    • @DJShadesUK
      @DJShadesUK 7 лет назад +35

      NeoDerGrose If you look closely at the 6 yellow boxes (three on each side of the track before the pit) they each have horizontally mounted rubber tyres, attached to motors, which press up against the side of the engine unit and push it across the gap as it rides the (unpowered) steel wheels either side of the pit. Its pretty much the same principle as that used to push rollercoaster cars in and out of their stations, except those powered rubber tyres are usually mounted vertically and push on the bottom of the coaster cars.

    • @NeoDerGrose
      @NeoDerGrose 7 лет назад +5

      You are right, I didn't notice them. This makes more sense since I think you had to be a bit faster to just roll through.

  • @sthpac69
    @sthpac69 7 лет назад +3

    This makes more since than flipping one car at a time. Who ever thought that was a fast way must have been doing the numbers wrong.

    • @whiteknightcat
      @whiteknightcat 6 лет назад +5

      This isn't coal, and it's not a cross-country mine-to-plant operation. It's an internal process.

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 5 лет назад +1

      The surface train flips them. But they flip then roaling

    • @danielrose1392
      @danielrose1392 5 лет назад +3

      Flipping the cars requires basically nothing to be installed on the car, maximizing the load. Makes most sense for long routes where transportation costs and not loading costs are your main concern.

  • @trendinvestor2893
    @trendinvestor2893 5 лет назад +7

    How many trains do they have working on this loop at a time?

  • @curtnicholson7771
    @curtnicholson7771 4 года назад +1

    As tight as those cars are to one another they sure couldn't make much of a turn anywhere!

    • @schalkeschalkelocomotivesg1015
      @schalkeschalkelocomotivesg1015  3 года назад +8

      they are so close and including overlapping design so that during loading no ore can fall between them. However, this dsign is done for 110m curve radius.

  • @gsilva220
    @gsilva220 5 лет назад +8

    *Train transfers from one track system to another*
    -The black mesa transit system....

    • @jimjamothers3662
      @jimjamothers3662 3 года назад

      OMG YES! Hahaha. I was scrolling down to see if anyone else thought "Black Mesa". It's the sound when the trap doors are reclosing that did it for me.

  • @user-kolhoz100let.
    @user-kolhoz100let. 5 лет назад +3

    Колесные пары крепятся к открывающимся люкам?Спасибо.

  • @anvilhead59
    @anvilhead59 4 года назад +2

    Interesting. Different than the 1970's ASEA system that hinged along the side. The cars and locomotive were suspended by the same kind of wheels shown here. This process is quite a bit slower than what the ASEAs did in the San Manuel underground copper mine.

  • @whataboutbob7967
    @whataboutbob7967 4 года назад +4

    they need one of those at every drive thru

  • @boristhebarbarian
    @boristhebarbarian 6 лет назад +2

    So if i get this right: the train comes from the mining face to the unloading site shown here and then the ore gets transported to the surface by conveyorbelt. Is that unloading zone at 1365m below ground level or is it 1365m long?? (seems a bit deep)

    • @johndoe1909
      @johndoe1909 5 лет назад +4

      Underground. It's a deep mine for sure.

  • @pingpongpung
    @pingpongpung 5 лет назад +2

    Now it only needs a sweeping system for those leftovers on the edges of the cars.

    • @ph11p3540
      @ph11p3540 5 лет назад

      If that was used in a precious metal ore mine, that small amount of left over did would be grounds for job discipline or dismissal.

    • @martinborgen
      @martinborgen 5 лет назад

      @@ph11p3540 Well, it's Iron ore, and chances are the ore left over will end up in the system anyways...

  • @GrowlyBear917
    @GrowlyBear917 3 года назад +1

    best close-up shot is at 3:17

  • @arooaroo8370
    @arooaroo8370 5 лет назад

    How how many capacity this locomotive and how many GBS

  • @scotiajinker8392
    @scotiajinker8392 2 года назад

    Amazing,but that’s going to take some amount maintenance.

  • @djfaber
    @djfaber 2 года назад +1

    remarkable that there's so much coal being dumped and yet everything is covered in a fine silica powder looking substance.

  • @RazsterTW
    @RazsterTW 7 лет назад +1

    This unloader makes more sense than the Helix Dumper. Cost wise.

  • @Michael-by4jw
    @Michael-by4jw 5 лет назад +1

    What causes the bottom to open and then re shut?

  • @theonetheonlyjj7445
    @theonetheonlyjj7445 7 лет назад +5

    What hapens if you fall down there?

    • @fritz46
      @fritz46 7 лет назад +22

      You'll get dirty.

    • @mijiajosef3270
      @mijiajosef3270 6 лет назад +8

      Andrei George Jurj
      See the movie 300 for details.

    • @didsombodysaysomthing4086
      @didsombodysaysomthing4086 6 лет назад +2

      Andrei George Jurj only one way to find out jump

    • @hadawaco
      @hadawaco 6 лет назад +3

      You'll probably die? unless a fail safe is able to stop the machine from crushing you into jam :)

    • @dj6769
      @dj6769 6 лет назад

      You get all scratched up.........

  • @numberwhite7082
    @numberwhite7082 5 лет назад

    For size refrence. The yellow thing on the side of the cart is the same size as both your palms..

  • @johnmoore8016
    @johnmoore8016 7 лет назад +1

    how many tons in each wagon?

    • @jakobbjerke4724
      @jakobbjerke4724 6 лет назад +2

      It's 50t nominal, but in practicality closer to 30 is used to keep down wear and tear.

  • @shirleymental4189
    @shirleymental4189 2 года назад

    What is that. Oil?

  • @chris746568462
    @chris746568462 5 лет назад +4

    Do these sell well when your salesperson says: " We fix the wheels to the ground and the rail to the train"?

    • @hausaffe100
      @hausaffe100 3 года назад

      talgo mounts rails on the train and their gauge changing stations and use a lot of lube too get stuff sliding

  • @narf0339
    @narf0339 5 лет назад +6

    gravity, you have work to do.

  • @1-8-6-8
    @1-8-6-8 Год назад +1

    It's a RockFlo system

  • @44robnl
    @44robnl 4 года назад +4

    I'm surprised there are no dust clouds.

    • @Tuberuser187
      @Tuberuser187 4 года назад +2

      Coal mines have lots of dust abatement like ultra fine mist sprinklers fired through fans, the dust is harmful to respiratory health and an explosion risk so they work to keep it to minimum.

    • @Groza_Dallocort
      @Groza_Dallocort 3 года назад +4

      @@Tuberuser187 this is iron ore. The last coal mine in Sweden closed down back in 1979

    • @Tuberuser187
      @Tuberuser187 3 года назад +2

      @@Groza_Dallocort Awesome, I notice an EVE profile pic too~

    • @Groza_Dallocort
      @Groza_Dallocort 3 года назад

      @@Tuberuser187 yeah capsuleer since 2012

  • @primus108
    @primus108 7 лет назад

    why are the cars only partially filled?

    • @dierks67
      @dierks67 6 лет назад +2

      Bruce Symington Maybe it's to heavy?

    • @jakobbjerke4724
      @jakobbjerke4724 6 лет назад +7

      To avoid overfilling (dropping ore where it shouldn't be) and to reduce wear and tear of the system (nominal load 50t, normal load 30t).

    • @danielrose1392
      @danielrose1392 5 лет назад +3

      Such loops are often only a 5 minute drive. Not worth spending the time to carefully load at the maximum.

  • @stnicholas54
    @stnicholas54 4 года назад +1

    What is that stuff the wagons are dumping ?

    • @chestermanifold9023
      @chestermanifold9023 4 года назад +2

      I assume coal

    • @stnicholas54
      @stnicholas54 4 года назад

      @@chestermanifold9023 Yes, of course it is. Thank you. It's just that I couldn't quite make out what they were dumping as the light, during the first minute of the unloading process, was very poor.

    • @kallie1338
      @kallie1338 4 года назад +2

      @@stnicholas54 Its Iron ore

    • @stnicholas54
      @stnicholas54 4 года назад

      @@kallie1338 Iron ore - I see. Thank you kindly.

    • @erikafurberg6271
      @erikafurberg6271 4 года назад +2

      Magnetite

  • @DavidHuber63
    @DavidHuber63 Год назад

    We are always finding faster ways of relocating our mountains top to the bottom of our sea.

  • @Ramash440
    @Ramash440 5 лет назад

    What do these things run on anyways ? I don't see any third rails or catenary here, and I sure hope they're not running diesel this deep underground.

    • @catprog
      @catprog 5 лет назад +1

      I think at 0:57 you see fixed motors in the yellow box pushing the train.

    • @Ramash440
      @Ramash440 2 года назад

      @Jona v.K Yep, seems like catprog gave the correct answer back when I made the comment. Guess the notification just never arrived.

    • @TheTerrorHamster
      @TheTerrorHamster 2 года назад

      @Jona v.K Yes, top pantograph between loading and unloading, side pantograph at loading and the tyres at unloading. No batteries

  • @karol6322
    @karol6322 Год назад

    Pellets😍

  • @free2roam674
    @free2roam674 2 года назад

    We humans are fast becoming redundant. I recently watched a video about grain harvesting. One man to run the massive combine and 4-5 to pull the grain wagons. It used to take many more, and soon it will all be done AI. Progress??

  • @dapto234
    @dapto234 3 года назад

    What country is this in.

  • @edsonalvesdosreis1422
    @edsonalvesdosreis1422 4 года назад

    Itau 12:59

  • @TerranREBEL
    @TerranREBEL 5 лет назад

    Wouldn't the curved rail at the bottom heat up from the friction of the bottom plates of the cars and the coal sliding over them eventually? hot coals being probably bad to drop in the bunker and all... maybe a bar across the opening end of those bottom plates (lids?) that sticks out into guide slots in the sides of the tunnel under those rollers might work? and avoid the possible inferno of doom which might otherwise ensue, at least in my admittedly super-pessimistic imagination.

    • @someguy4915
      @someguy4915 5 лет назад +5

      Yeah they probably didn't think of issues like overheating...
      The bottom doesn't just scrape over bare metal but instead the bottom is attached to the wheelset which rolls over the rails, causing very little friction, nowhere near enough to cause real heat...

    • @TerranREBEL
      @TerranREBEL 5 лет назад +1

      @@someguy4915 oh thank goodness! If you are right it would take a lot of seized wheels before issues ensued... disaster in my head averted, narrowly!

    • @martinborgen
      @martinborgen 5 лет назад +4

      Probably there's a wheel somewhere, but even then, it's iron ore, and I'm not sure the friction would be that bad anywyas, even if it was just a slide.

    • @TerranREBEL
      @TerranREBEL 5 лет назад +2

      @@martinborgen Iron, eh? now my not inconsiderable lack of research is showing... ooops! i suppose the more than slight difference in flammability should help to affirm the imaginary disaster's complete demise. Thanks for that!

    • @ale3462512
      @ale3462512 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@Foxtrott_4 are you assuming this is coal because of the colour? Kiruna mine is an Iron ore underground mine, very rare but they exists.

  • @CodeIrminsul
    @CodeIrminsul 3 года назад

    Hi. What is it unloading here?

  • @th1alb
    @th1alb 6 лет назад

    that's one complicated way of doing a simple task

    • @philip_wahlberg
      @philip_wahlberg 6 лет назад +5

      Oh hello Einstein how would you do it? Peter Gizmos

    • @erikafurberg6271
      @erikafurberg6271 4 года назад +2

      Very cheap... only cost, gravity..

  • @chadhickey9527
    @chadhickey9527 4 года назад

    Looks like an expensive operation.

    • @kallie1338
      @kallie1338 4 года назад

      The whole operation for that level 1365, cost of approximately 12 billions(Kr in swedish currency). Not sure if that price include tunneling.

  • @superwiseman452
    @superwiseman452 5 лет назад +2

    coal? where is this mine?

    • @auze7798
      @auze7798 5 лет назад +3

      Malm, Sweden, Kiruna

    • @LV-426...
      @LV-426... 4 года назад +3

      Irone ore.

  • @Hypercube9
    @Hypercube9 6 лет назад +4

    I wonder how much the coal on the EDGE of each dumpster weighs, what it's value is, and if anyone has does a cost/benefit analysis on having basically a leaf blower or one of those dryers at the end of a car wash blow it off of the edge so it can be sold vs. transporting it back to wherever and getting reloaded and using more fuel in the process. If this unloading is actually continuous and one train takes ~4 minutes to deliver it's load, then that's 15 trains/ hour. 360 trains/ day. 7,560 train cars/ day EACH with I'm guessing maybe a pound or two of coal NOT getting dumped at this station. That's between 8-15 TONS of coal NOT getting dumped when it should EVERY DAY!!!
    Now IDK the price of coal, but I assume it's higher than the cost to run a fan or something to blow that little bit off of each car! Not to mention the added cost of hauling that coal back to the mine! Plus the environmental cost (and potential fines) of having that coal get blown off during the trip!

    •  6 лет назад +8

      Its iron ore they are mining here

    • @pearlyhumbucker9065
      @pearlyhumbucker9065 6 лет назад +7

      @Hypercube9
      By the way - your calculation is wrong.
      You assume the material on the edges gets lost in the process and must be filled new on the edges at every roundtrip.
      But that is clearly not the case. The material laying on the edges will fall into the bin on the way back of the train. Or it may stay there - nevertheless it must not be reloaded, it is on the train. Reloading the train will fill up the amount of material at the edges that has fallen down in the bin on the transport, if there is material sitting the new material will simply fall down in the bin.
      The material from the last round trip still is on the train - in case it stays on the edges it will stay there for the whole workshift(s) and will not get lost until the train may get a washout someday......
      For the 21 cars in that train and an assumed 2 pound worth of iron ore sitting on the edges you get 42 pounds of iron ore making roundtrips the whole workshift until the washout will clean the cars, this process then recycles the used water and the iron ore from the washout will be returned to the loading process.
      Remind you this train is NOT a train that delivers material to the harbour - it is an internal transportation device in the mines. LKAB´s "normal" trains for transport of the iron ore to the harbour look completely different to the train in the video.....
      Maybe you should get the facts straight prior to posting? Isnt it somewhat funny to swagger about some coal delivering process when the material they handle here is iron ore????
      You really are "Hyper". Your head is a Cube? If not - do you know the head is normally round so that the thoughts can change the direction?

    • @oljefri
      @oljefri 6 лет назад +1

      It's iron Ore...

    • @whiteknightcat
      @whiteknightcat 6 лет назад +1

      Well, Hypercube? Any rebuttals?

  • @angedolittle9975
    @angedolittle9975 5 лет назад +4

    why am i here?

  • @bahn2452
    @bahn2452 7 лет назад +7

    You say completely automated and manless but it looks like there is someone in the cab??

    • @jakobbjerke4724
      @jakobbjerke4724 6 лет назад +5

      This was a trial, of course there's staff to monitor the progress. They sat with their hands in their laps.

    • @hadawaco
      @hadawaco 6 лет назад +3

      Machinery as big and as complex as this will always require humans to be watching, so many things can go wrong, but for the most part it is automated.

    • @DerangedDragon99
      @DerangedDragon99 6 лет назад +2

      The Arizona Power coal trains, there are two, are largely unattended most of the time.

    • @louielouiepks
      @louielouiepks 5 лет назад +1

      Crash Test Dummy.
      Not trying to be rude, just first thing I thought about.

    • @danielrose1392
      @danielrose1392 5 лет назад

      Such tasks are often automated to improve efficiency, not to cut the labor cost. The speed limiting factor here is probably the following equipment further transporting the coal. With automation, you can aim for a good processing capacity without overloading or wasting time.

  • @olafmichelson8017
    @olafmichelson8017 4 года назад

    The metro

  • @dimievers5573
    @dimievers5573 4 года назад +1

    driverless ?? then why is there a driver in the loc ??

    •  4 года назад

      I think only this unloading part is driverless, so that's why

    • @schalkeschalkelocomotivesg1015
      @schalkeschalkelocomotivesg1015  3 года назад +1

      it's really driverless; video was done during commissioning where a driver wqas in the cab overlooking everything.

  • @cbonz7734
    @cbonz7734 2 года назад

    It isn't manless because there's a guy driving the loco and guys standing around.

    • @TheTerrorHamster
      @TheTerrorHamster 2 года назад

      This was early after starting operation on the new level. The guy in the loco is still testing and observing while the system is presented to the people around. I have seen the loco driving with no one in it

  • @Daysed.and.Konfuzed
    @Daysed.and.Konfuzed 2 года назад

    This place looks like Black Mesa.

  • @2Je11ies
    @2Je11ies 7 лет назад +4

    That train driver has the most mundane and mind numbing job in the world.

    • @rpriesol
      @rpriesol 7 лет назад +4

      A train driver? Do you mean a computer, since this is a self driving train :)

    • @LatitudeSky
      @LatitudeSky 6 лет назад +5

      Roman Priesol sure looked like someone in a high visibility jacket was in the cab.

    • @jakobbjerke4724
      @jakobbjerke4724 6 лет назад +5

      Trial. He just monitors the system.

    • @cthunter41
      @cthunter41 6 лет назад +7

      Yes he does, I used to work at a rock quarry where some nights I would sit on a train for 12 hours going a quarter mph In a giant loop while it got loaded.

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 5 лет назад +3

      This is LKAB. Hardly anything is maned he is probably just there for the runin period. And most of the maned stuff is driven with remote controlled. It's cheaper. Saving almost a hour of worktime getting to work

  • @jacholas1887
    @jacholas1887 10 месяцев назад

    The coal knew too much..

  • @JG-dKaPiXL
    @JG-dKaPiXL 5 лет назад

    446000 vue et seulement 535 abonnées vraiment dommage abonnée vous les gens moi c'est fait :-)

  • @olafmichelson8017
    @olafmichelson8017 4 года назад

    Exodus

  • @mollevej30
    @mollevej30 5 лет назад +1

    Smart.
    But lets get some nuclear power!

    • @kattn01
      @kattn01 5 лет назад +1

      This is iron ore. LKAB is world famous for exactly that.

  • @eagledustoff37shortserious65
    @eagledustoff37shortserious65 6 лет назад +3

    Person making the video sucks! Zoomed in way to close and constantly moving around makes one sea sick!

  • @Pops1970
    @Pops1970 5 лет назад +2

    Way to go...eliminate as many jobs as you possibly can

  • @phorewhoresman1897
    @phorewhoresman1897 5 лет назад

    Title reminds me of what I do to my girlfriend when she is asleep.

  • @justimagine2403
    @justimagine2403 3 года назад

    Like it or not, coal is the way.

    • @davidpearson3304
      @davidpearson3304 3 года назад +2

      Maybe or maybe not..... but this isn’t coal in the video.

  • @ralphaverill2001
    @ralphaverill2001 5 лет назад +1

    Great. Now figure out what to do with the facility when coal becomes a real fossil fuel; something we used to use.

    • @tomwolf2603
      @tomwolf2603 5 лет назад +2

      its iron ore, so nowhere near coal :D read up on LKAB in Kiruna on wiki an ull know what they do..

    • @ralphaverill2001
      @ralphaverill2001 5 лет назад

      Tom Wolf It sure looks like coal to me. Iron ore is brown and usually pelletized at the mine.
      It takes a lot of coal to make steel. The difference between iron and steel is carbon, usually in the form of coke. Coke is derived from coal by cooking it in a low oxygen oven.

    • @tomwolf2603
      @tomwolf2603 5 лет назад +3

      @@ralphaverill2001 I know what coal and coke looks like.. This is iron ore at Kiruna /Gälivare/ Svappavaara thats the only location LKAB mines at and thats exclusively iron ore, coal we got only in mid sweden and some smaller deposits here in the south.
      LKAB is also working on hydrogen burned furnaces to process their ore and completely omit the use of coal wich to my knowledge is a first in the world.
      source: www.hybritdevelopment.com/

    • @ralphaverill2001
      @ralphaverill2001 5 лет назад

      @@tomwolf2603 Thanks for straightening me out. (It still looks like coal!)