US2572403A - Coal mining machine - Google Patents

Coal mining machine Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2572403A
US2572403A US56450A US5645048A US2572403A US 2572403 A US2572403 A US 2572403A US 56450 A US56450 A US 56450A US 5645048 A US5645048 A US 5645048A US 2572403 A US2572403 A US 2572403A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
shaft
coal
blade
chain
tubular shaft
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US56450A
Inventor
Merlin R Stevenson
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US56450A priority Critical patent/US2572403A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2572403A publication Critical patent/US2572403A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
    • E21CMINING OR QUARRYING
    • E21C27/00Machines which completely free the mineral from the seam
    • E21C27/20Mineral freed by means not involving slitting
    • E21C27/22Mineral freed by means not involving slitting by rotary drills with breaking-down means, e.g. wedge-shaped drills, i.e. the rotary axis of the tool carrier being substantially perpendicular to the working face, e.g. MARIETTA-type

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a method-" L and apparatusfor; mining coal or similar materials, and
  • the principal object ofthe' invention provide a boring head whichwill simultaneouslycut and break the :coal from the vein ready for haulage.
  • Another object ofthe invention is. to provide 1 a-method of mining coal wherein-relatively large; round bore are made: into 1 the: coal at spaced intervals so that the intervening coal between: the bores can b'e'1readilybroken' down.
  • Fig. 1 is a side elevation ⁇ illustrating-the invention applied to a typical Universal coal cutter. such as used in coal mines Fig. 2.
  • Fig. 2 is av front view of: theimproved boring" head, looking-in the direction'of the arro-w 2*"" in Fig.1
  • Fig. 3 is an enlarged; longitudinal section through the-boring:head taken onth'eline 3"-'--3. Fig. 2.;
  • Fig. .4-' isza stillfurther enlarged; detail, hori zontalsection; taken on. thelineL-l; Fig. 3: and
  • Fig. 5 is a similarly enlarged top view of the improved boringhead, looking: in the direction of arrow 5 in Fig. 3.
  • Fig; 1 a" typical-universal coal cutter'is illustrated, of the type k no'wn in theart as the- Jetfrey' 29-U.' Coal icutters' of this 'typeiare' mount; ed on a truck I8 supporting aturntable' II and a motor'and reel'box l2; Aboom; l3 is mounted on I a: horizontal hinge l l onthe; turntable H i so that it may be r'aised and lowered through the medium of hydx aulic 'jack's l-5
  • Theboom- I3'is provided with hydraulic motors for rotating a cutter bar and for 'rotating a tubular'housing aboutthecutter bar;
  • Theimp'roved'boring head ' is provided with a tubulansupporting shaft l6 which replaces the sleeve of the usual'cutter head, and which is rotated by the mechanism ihthe boom l3 which rotates: the sleeve'of the usual head.
  • a central shaft l1 passesthrough the tubular shaft l6 and replaces the usual cutter bar of the conventional coal cutter.
  • Thehydrauli'c'motors in the boom l3 rotate the tubular shaft lfi'and'theshaft" I! under the same controls and bymeans'ofthe same mechanism that formerly operated the cutting chain and boring bar offtheusual coal cutter.
  • This; invention relates more particularly to This 25: tachment flange 2 0.
  • the tubular shaft l6 is provided at its'outer extremity with an inclined flange 2
  • a stub shaft 23 ' isrotatablymounted in suitable anti-friction bearings '24 inthe housing I8.
  • the shaft I1 is rotatably and axially mounted in the tubular Jshaft l 6 in suitable antifriction' bearings 21!.
  • a breaking :blade '28' is mounted on the forward flange ZU'of" the housing l8. by means of cap screws 29. swings spirally rearward, similarlycto theiblade of an auger orboringbit;
  • the tension screw 35 is provided with a Wrench portion 4
  • the block 34 is rigidly mounted between an outside chain-retaim'ng plate 36 and an inside chainretaining plate 31.
  • the plates '36 and 31 are elongated and provided with rounded extremities to conform to the path of, and to slidably support, the chain 30.
  • the plates are rigidly at tached in place by means of attachment screws I 38 which pass the outer plate 36, and are thread ed into the breaking blade 28.
  • the entering edge of the blade 28 will be positioned well forward of the trailing edge thereof.
  • the entering edge carries the coal-cutting chain 30, and this chain is rotating at higher speed than the tubular shaft [6, since the construction of the conventional coal cutter rotates the shaft M at higher speed.
  • will cut a channelin the coal and, as the entering edge rotates the entering edge of the blade 28 will enter this channel, and the rearward incline of the blade 28 will break the coal from the channel outwardly so as to rapidly bore a hole on a relatively steep helix while simultaneously breaking the coal backwardly between the cuts of the helix.
  • the entire coal face canbe rapidly removed by asimple boring operation, or the face may be bored at spaced-apart points in the face, and the coal between the bores may be broken down.
  • the breaking blade 28 is advanced into the coal face by the natural incline of the breaking blade and by the self-propelling of the truck Ill forwardly.
  • the boring head may be made in any size. As illustrated, it is designed to bore ahole in the coal approximately four feet in'diameten.
  • a boring head for coal cutting machines comprising: a shaft housing; a stub shaft rotatably mounted in said shaft housing; a spirally inclined breaking blade fixedly mounted on the forward face of said housing the outer edge of said less coal cutting chain positioned at the entering edge of said blade so as to cut a slot for the blade to enter; a chain sprocket on said stub shaft supporting s'aid chain; a tubular shaft connected to and supporting said housing; so as to position the stub shaft so that its axis will intersect the axis ofsaid tubular shaft at an acute angle; an axial drive shaft in said tubular shaft and driving said stub shaft; and-*means for rotating said tubular shaft and said central shaft independently of eachother.
  • a boring head for coal cutting machines comprising: a shaft housing; a stub shaft rotatably mounted'in said shaft housing; a spirally inclined breaking blade fixedly mounted on the forward face of said housing the outer edge of said blade extending spirally rearward; an endless coal cutting chain positioned at the entering edge of said blade so as to cut a slot for the blade to enter; a chain sprocket on said stub shaft supporting said chain; a tubular shaft connected to and supporting said housing so as to position the stubshaft so that its axis willintersect the axis of said tubular shaft at an acute angle; an axial drive shaft in said tubular shaft; bevel gears connecting said drive shaft to said stub shaft; and means for independently rotating said drive shaft and said tubular shaft in thesame direction and at differing speeds.
  • a coal cutting device comprising: a tubular shaft; an axial shaft passing axially through said tubular shaft; means hingedly supporting one extremity of said tubular shaft; means for swinging the other extremity of said tubular shaft about said'hinge means; a head member secured to the free extremity of said tubular shaft; a breaking blade mounted on said head member the outer edge of said blade extending spirally rearward; a sprocket shaft in said head member; a sprocket on the forward extremity of said sprocket shaft; an endless coal cutting chain trained about said sprocket and positioned at the entering edge of said breaking blade to cut a path for the latter; and means for rotating said tubular shaft and said axial shaft at different speeds in a common direction, the axis of said sprocket shaft intersecting the axis of said axial shaft at an angle i pp m ly 1 and means transmitting 'the rotation of said axial shaft to said sprocket shaft.
  • a coal cutting device comprising: a tubular shaft; an axial shaft passing axially through said tubular shaft; means hingedly supporting one extremity of said tubular shaft; means for swinging the other extremity of said tubular shaft about said hinge means; an inclined flange at the free extremity of said tubular shaft; a head housing secured on said inclined flange so as to posi-- tion its axis at an angle to the axis of said tubu-- lar shaft; an inclined attachment flange at the.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mining & Mineral Resources (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • General Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Geochemistry & Mineralogy (AREA)
  • Geology (AREA)
  • Earth Drilling (AREA)

Description

Oct. 23, 1951 M. R. STEVENSON 2,572,403
COAL MINING MACHINE Filed Oct. 25, 1948 2 SHEETS-SHEET l INVENTOR. MERE/N R STt-Mf/YSO/Y.
Oct. 23, 1951 M. R. STEVENSON 2,572,403
COAL MINING MACHINE I Filed Oct. 25, 1948 2 SHEETSSHEET 2 IN VEN TOR.
ATTORNEY.
Patented Oct. 23, 1951 UNITED- STATES: PATENT OFFICE.
1. This inventionrelates to a method-" L and apparatusfor; mining coal or similar materials, and
more particularly to a boring head fonboring' into a wall of coal.
The principal object ofthe' invention provide a boring head whichwill simultaneouslycut and break the :coal from the vein ready for haulage.
Another: object-is toso'econstru'ct' ther'device that it can be appli'edto present rail supported; coal cutting machines; and sothat it can'be operated at any desired height or atany desired angle so as to obtain full-advantage'of 'thet-position ofthe-coal.
Another object ofthe invention is." to provide 1 a-method of mining coal wherein-relatively large; round bore are made: into 1 the: coal at spaced intervals so that the intervening coal between: the bores can b'e'1readilybroken' down.
Other objects and: advantages: reside in the detail construction of the invention; which-is designed forfsimplicity, economy; and efficiency. These will become more'iap'parent from" the:fol-=- lowing description.
In thev following detailedi. description of the invention,1.reference" is. had to the accompanying drawing which formsa part hereof; Likenu merals refer to like partsin' all views of the drawing and: throughout the; description;
In the drawings Fig; 1 is a side elevation} illustrating-the invention applied to a typical Universal coal cutter. such as used in coal mines Fig. 2. is av front view of: theimproved boring" head, looking-in the direction'of the arro-w 2*"" in Fig.1
Fig; 3 is an enlarged; longitudinal section through the-boring:head taken onth'eline 3"-'--3. Fig. 2.;
Fig. .4-' isza stillfurther enlarged; detail, hori zontalsection; taken on. thelineL-l; Fig. 3: and
Fig. 5 is a similarly enlarged top view of the improved boringhead, looking: in the direction of arrow 5 in Fig. 3.
In Fig; 1 a" typical-universal coal cutter'is illustrated, of the type k no'wn in theart as the- Jetfrey' 29-U.' Coal icutters' of this 'typeiare' mount; ed on a truck I8 supporting aturntable' II and a motor'and reel'box l2; Aboom; l3 is mounted on I a: horizontal hinge l l onthe; turntable H i so that it may be r'aised and lowered through the medium of hydx aulic 'jack's l-5 Theboom- I3'is provided with hydraulic motors for rotating a cutter bar and for 'rotating a tubular'housing aboutthecutter bar; The cutter bar 65'- 5':CIaims:. (Cl. 262-9 2 in the usua-Icoalcutter operates an elongated, flat cutter'h'e'ad' for shearing or cutting slots in the coal; cutter'head'with its cutter bar and sleeve are removed'and'the'improved boring head is applied in their stead.
Theimp'roved'boring head 'is provided with a tubulansupporting shaft l6 which replaces the sleeve of the usual'cutter head, and which is rotated by the mechanism ihthe boom l3 which rotates: the sleeve'of the usual head. A central shaft l1 passesthrough the tubular shaft l6 and replaces the usual cutter bar of the conventional coal cutter.
Thehydrauli'c'motors in the boom l3 rotate the tubular shaft lfi'and'theshaft" I! under the same controls and bymeans'ofthe same mechanism that formerly operated the cutting chain and boring bar offtheusual coal cutter.
This; invention relates more particularly to This 25: tachment flange 2 0.
The tubular shaft l6 is provided at its'outer extremity with an inclined flange 2| against which the flange I9.isbolted by means of suitable cap screws orbolts '22. tions the axes of the'housing IB' and the shaft I6 softhat they will 'intersect each other at an angle ofapproximately 10, as shown in Fig. 3.
A stub shaft 23 'isrotatablymounted in suitable anti-friction bearings '24 inthe housing I8.
The stub shaftcarrie's adriven bevelgear 25 at itsinner'extremity,which is in constant mesh with: a drivebevel gearZ 6" on the extremity'of the shaft IT. The shaft I1 is rotatably and axially mounted in the tubular Jshaft l 6 in suitable antifriction' bearings 21!.
A breaking :blade '28'=is mounted on the forward flange ZU'of" the housing l8. by means of cap screws 29. swings spirally rearward, similarlycto theiblade of an auger orboringbit;
In' applying this invention, the usual This arrangement posi- The outer edge of the breaking blade i 3 35 is threaded into the block 34 and bears at its outer extremity against the block 33 so that the block 33 can be forced outwardly to increase the tension in the chain 30.
The tension screw 35 is provided with a Wrench portion 4| which is accessible through an opening 42 in the plate 36.
The block 34 is rigidly mounted between an outside chain-retaim'ng plate 36 and an inside chainretaining plate 31. The plates '36 and 31 are elongated and provided with rounded extremities to conform to the path of, and to slidably support, the chain 30. The plates are rigidly at tached in place by means of attachment screws I 38 which pass the outer plate 36, and are thread ed into the breaking blade 28.
said blade extending spirally rearward; an end- The block 33 is adjustably supported between the plates 36 and 3'! by means of clamp screws 39 which pass through the outer plate 33 and."
through elongated slots 40in the block 33, thence through the inner plate 31 and are threaded into the breaking blade 28. The'elongated slots 40 serve'to allow outward and inward movement of the'block 33 under the influence of the screw 35.
'It can be readily seen that as the tubular shaft I6 is rotated by the hydraulic motors in the boom 13, the axis of the housing I8 will gyrate in a conical path, carrying the breaking blade forwardly in the direction of the arrow in Fig. 2.
It will be noted that, due to the incline of the blade 28 and to the incline of the shaft 23, the entering edge of the blade 28 will be positioned well forward of the trailing edge thereof. The entering edge carries the coal-cutting chain 30, and this chain is rotating at higher speed than the tubular shaft [6, since the construction of the conventional coal cutter rotates the shaft M at higher speed.
Thus, it will be seen that the teeth 3| will cut a channelin the coal and, as the entering edge rotates the entering edge of the blade 28 will enter this channel, and the rearward incline of the blade 28 will break the coal from the channel outwardly so as to rapidly bore a hole on a relatively steep helix while simultaneously breaking the coal backwardly between the cuts of the helix.
The entire coal face canbe rapidly removed by asimple boring operation, or the face may be bored at spaced-apart points in the face, and the coal between the bores may be broken down.
The construction of the coal cutter illustrated in Fig. l'allows the boring head to be raised and lowered from the floor to a height to out eight feet above the floor, and the boom I3 may be swung from side to side to cover a width of fifteen feet. The breaking blade 28 is advanced into the coal face by the natural incline of the breaking blade and by the self-propelling of the truck Ill forwardly. The boring head may be made in any size. As illustrated, it is designed to bore ahole in the coal approximately four feet in'diameten.
While a' specific form of the improvement has been described and illustrated herein, it is to be understood that the same may be varied, within the scope of the appended claims, without departing from the spirit of the invention.
Having thus described the invention, what is claimed and desired secured by Letters Patent is:
1. A boring head for coal cutting machines comprising: a shaft housing; a stub shaft rotatably mounted in said shaft housing; a spirally inclined breaking blade fixedly mounted on the forward face of said housing the outer edge of said less coal cutting chain positioned at the entering edge of said blade so as to cut a slot for the blade to enter; a chain sprocket on said stub shaft supporting s'aid chain; a tubular shaft connected to and supporting said housing; so as to position the stub shaft so that its axis will intersect the axis ofsaid tubular shaft at an acute angle; an axial drive shaft in said tubular shaft and driving said stub shaft; and-*means for rotating said tubular shaft and said central shaft independently of eachother. I
3. A boring head for coal cutting machines comprising: a shaft housing; a stub shaft rotatably mounted'in said shaft housing; a spirally inclined breaking blade fixedly mounted on the forward face of said housing the outer edge of said blade extending spirally rearward; an endless coal cutting chain positioned at the entering edge of said blade so as to cut a slot for the blade to enter; a chain sprocket on said stub shaft supporting said chain; a tubular shaft connected to and supporting said housing so as to position the stubshaft so that its axis willintersect the axis of said tubular shaft at an acute angle; an axial drive shaft in said tubular shaft; bevel gears connecting said drive shaft to said stub shaft; and means for independently rotating said drive shaft and said tubular shaft in thesame direction and at differing speeds.
.4. A coal cutting device comprising: a tubular shaft; an axial shaft passing axially through said tubular shaft; means hingedly supporting one extremity of said tubular shaft; means for swinging the other extremity of said tubular shaft about said'hinge means; a head member secured to the free extremity of said tubular shaft; a breaking blade mounted on said head member the outer edge of said blade extending spirally rearward; a sprocket shaft in said head member; a sprocket on the forward extremity of said sprocket shaft; an endless coal cutting chain trained about said sprocket and positioned at the entering edge of said breaking blade to cut a path for the latter; and means for rotating said tubular shaft and said axial shaft at different speeds in a common direction, the axis of said sprocket shaft intersecting the axis of said axial shaft at an angle i pp m ly 1 and means transmitting 'the rotation of said axial shaft to said sprocket shaft.
A coal cutting device comprising: a tubular shaft; an axial shaft passing axially through said tubular shaft; means hingedly supporting one extremity of said tubular shaft; means for swinging the other extremity of said tubular shaft about said hinge means; an inclined flange at the free extremity of said tubular shaft; a head housing secured on said inclined flange so as to posi-- tion its axis at an angle to the axis of said tubu-- lar shaft; an inclined attachment flange at the.
forward face of said housing; a breaking blade secured on the forward face of said attachment flange; an inside chain retaining plate secured 5v against said breaking blade; a stub shaft extending through said breaking blade and said retaining plate; a chain sprocket mounted on the forward extremity of said stub shaft; a separating block positioned adjacent said sprocket; an arcuate tension block positioned alongside said separating block; an endless coal cutting chain trained around said sprocket and said tension block; means for separating said tension block from said separating block to increase the tension in said chain; an outer chain retaining plate covering said sprocket and said blocks; means transmitting rotation from said axial shaft to said stub shaft; and means for rotating said tubular shaft and said axial shaft, said cutting chain being positioned at the entering edge of said breaking blade so as to cut a slot for said blade to enter,
the outer edge of said blade extending spirally rearward so as to break the coal rearward from said slot.
MERLIN R. STEVENSON.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS
US56450A 1948-10-25 1948-10-25 Coal mining machine Expired - Lifetime US2572403A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US56450A US2572403A (en) 1948-10-25 1948-10-25 Coal mining machine

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US56450A US2572403A (en) 1948-10-25 1948-10-25 Coal mining machine

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2572403A true US2572403A (en) 1951-10-23

Family

ID=22004480

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US56450A Expired - Lifetime US2572403A (en) 1948-10-25 1948-10-25 Coal mining machine

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2572403A (en)

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2659585A (en) * 1951-06-29 1953-11-17 Goodman Mfg Co Power drive connection for combined rotatable and oscillatable mining tools
US2776809A (en) * 1953-05-19 1957-01-08 Joy Mfg Co Method of and apparatus for mining by drilling, coring, and breaking
US2776823A (en) * 1954-05-17 1957-01-08 Joy Mfg Co Rotating cutter and core breaker for continuous miner
US2836408A (en) * 1956-03-28 1958-05-27 Joy Mfg Co Rotary cutting, core breaking and conveying means
US2877999A (en) * 1949-09-08 1959-03-17 Colmol Company Continuous mining machine with vertically separable cutter carrying units
DE1059858B (en) * 1954-05-17 1959-06-25 Joy Mfg Co Extraction machine for coal u. Like. With a rotating head working like a circular saw and a rotating working tool assigned to it
US3380260A (en) * 1964-07-31 1968-04-30 Redl Narciss Albert Tunnel-boring machine
US4273383A (en) * 1978-03-03 1981-06-16 Gewerkschaft Eisenhutte Westfalia Mineral winning machines
US4303277A (en) * 1980-02-06 1981-12-01 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Interior Triangular shaped cutting head for use with a longwall mining machine
US5626399A (en) * 1992-08-26 1997-05-06 The University Of Queensland Apparatus for cutting and excavating solids
US20100052405A1 (en) * 2005-08-03 2010-03-04 Sandvik Mining And Construction G.M.B.H. Base for a Drilling Device

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US970725A (en) * 1907-10-19 1910-09-20 Harry A Kuhn Method of mining coal.
US1079353A (en) * 1908-11-21 1913-11-25 Harry A Kuhn Mining-machine.
US1290022A (en) * 1913-08-07 1918-12-31 Jeffrey Mfg Co Mining-machine.
US1371314A (en) * 1921-03-15 levin
US2148495A (en) * 1935-11-15 1939-02-28 Sullivan Machinery Co Apparatus for mining

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1371314A (en) * 1921-03-15 levin
US970725A (en) * 1907-10-19 1910-09-20 Harry A Kuhn Method of mining coal.
US1079353A (en) * 1908-11-21 1913-11-25 Harry A Kuhn Mining-machine.
US1290022A (en) * 1913-08-07 1918-12-31 Jeffrey Mfg Co Mining-machine.
US2148495A (en) * 1935-11-15 1939-02-28 Sullivan Machinery Co Apparatus for mining

Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2877999A (en) * 1949-09-08 1959-03-17 Colmol Company Continuous mining machine with vertically separable cutter carrying units
US2659585A (en) * 1951-06-29 1953-11-17 Goodman Mfg Co Power drive connection for combined rotatable and oscillatable mining tools
US2776809A (en) * 1953-05-19 1957-01-08 Joy Mfg Co Method of and apparatus for mining by drilling, coring, and breaking
US2776823A (en) * 1954-05-17 1957-01-08 Joy Mfg Co Rotating cutter and core breaker for continuous miner
DE1059858B (en) * 1954-05-17 1959-06-25 Joy Mfg Co Extraction machine for coal u. Like. With a rotating head working like a circular saw and a rotating working tool assigned to it
US2836408A (en) * 1956-03-28 1958-05-27 Joy Mfg Co Rotary cutting, core breaking and conveying means
US3380260A (en) * 1964-07-31 1968-04-30 Redl Narciss Albert Tunnel-boring machine
US4273383A (en) * 1978-03-03 1981-06-16 Gewerkschaft Eisenhutte Westfalia Mineral winning machines
US4303277A (en) * 1980-02-06 1981-12-01 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Interior Triangular shaped cutting head for use with a longwall mining machine
US5626399A (en) * 1992-08-26 1997-05-06 The University Of Queensland Apparatus for cutting and excavating solids
US20100052405A1 (en) * 2005-08-03 2010-03-04 Sandvik Mining And Construction G.M.B.H. Base for a Drilling Device
US7959378B2 (en) * 2005-08-03 2011-06-14 Sandvik Mining And Construction G.M.B.H. Base for a drilling device

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2572403A (en) Coal mining machine
US2754101A (en) Machine and method for mining underground deposits
US2654586A (en) Digging machine for mining coal
US2734731A (en) Mining machine
US1511957A (en) Horizontal earth-boring machine
US2775439A (en) Cutter head for driving crosscuts
US3232670A (en) Tunnel-boring rotary head with adjustably mounted gauge cutters
US3128998A (en) Scroll type full face continuous miner
US3773384A (en) Mining machine
US3157438A (en) Ripper type continuous mining machine having a sectional cutter drum
US2612361A (en) Mining machine
US2776823A (en) Rotating cutter and core breaker for continuous miner
US2776809A (en) Method of and apparatus for mining by drilling, coring, and breaking
US3052454A (en) Mining apparatus having coring and bursting head swingable in horizontal planes
US2118490A (en) Rotary boring apparatus
US2836408A (en) Rotary cutting, core breaking and conveying means
US4441761A (en) Mining machine
US3064958A (en) Drilling, core cutting and dislodging head for mining machines
US2546899A (en) Coal boring head
US2801091A (en) Mining and loading apparatus involving core cutting and dislodging means
US2801092A (en) Coal breaker wedge device
US3219389A (en) Drive for adjustable cutting rollers
US4123109A (en) Mining method
US3726563A (en) Method and apparatus for continuous mining
US3041054A (en) Apparatus for longwall mining