Difference between revisions of "Tripper Conveyors"

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==Design== Early tripper conveyors used canvas belts, but now they're  made from more flexible and durable plastics. Each belt is sealed at the  ends, roughly 2 feet wide by 16 long. A flap is affixed every 4 feet.  Keeping the belts taut are shafts or rollers slipped through either end.  They're held off the ground by a more solid metal framework. A cog is  attached to the outer end of each roller, and a metal chain, much akin  to that found on a bicycle, attaches them. One section of belt attaches  by means of yet another cog and chain to the next for as long as needed  for the tripper conveyor to serve its purpose in transporting materials.
==Design==
Early tripper conveyors used canvas belts, but now they're  made from more flexible and durable plastics. Each belt is sealed at the  ends, roughly 2 feet wide by 16 long. A flap is affixed every 4 feet.  Keeping the belts taut are shafts or rollers slipped through either end.  They're held off the ground by a more solid metal framework. A cog is  attached to the outer end of each roller, and a metal chain, much akin  to that found on a bicycle, attaches them. One section of belt attaches  by means of yet another cog and chain to the next for as long as needed  for the tripper conveyor to serve its purpose in transporting materials.




==Function==
==Function==
Although the conveyors move by a repeating series of  linkages between rollers, the power source of these linkages is not  always the same. Initially, large diesel motors were used. The motor's  flywheel would connect to a gear exchange called a speed reducer to give  the first roller in the series the low speed and high torque required  to move so much weight. However, the chains between cogs would often  break under the strain. For that reason, newer model tripper conveyors  have a smaller motor attached to the underside of the conveyor for every  hundred yards of belt. While this increases consumption of fuel, it  lessens time wasted in repairing damaged parts because the conveyor  remains functional to some degree.
Although the conveyors move by a repeating series of  linkages between rollers, the power source of these linkages is not  always the same. Initially, large diesel motors were used. The motor's  flywheel would connect to a gear exchange called a speed reducer to give  the first roller in the series the low speed and high torque required  to move so much weight. However, the chains between cogs would often  break under the strain. For that reason, newer model tripper conveyors  have a smaller motor attached to the underside of the conveyor for every  hundred yards of belt. While this increases consumption of fuel, it  lessens time wasted in repairing damaged parts because the conveyor  remains functional to some degree.

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