Grilles de broyeur à boulets | Panneaux de décharge | ATF

Pièces pour Broyeur à Boulets

Grilles de broyeur à boulets | Panneaux de décharge | ATF

Panneaux de grille et releveurs de pulpe pour broyeurs à boulets. Ouvertures 6-30 mm en alliages résistants à l'usure.

Blindages de virole Blindages d'extrémité Grilles

Spécifications clés

Aperture Range
6–30 mm (application-specific)
Steel Grade
Cr-Mo (ASTM A532), HCWI, AR alloys
Steel Hardness
350–450 BHN (Cr-Mo), 600+ BHN (HCWI)
Rubber Hardness
60–70 Shore A (anti-pegging designs)
Open Area
15–40% (balances throughput vs. retention)
Panel Weight
80–600 kg per grate segment
Slot Geometry
Tapered, parallel, or flared profiles

Key Features of ATF Grate Systems

Custom Apertures

Aperture sizes from 6-30mm to match your product specification.

Wear-Resistant Materials

Chrome-moly steel and rubber options for different wear conditions.

Pulp Lifter Design

Pulp lifters engineered for efficient slurry transport.

Anti-Pegging Features

Designs that resist plugging from near-size particles.

Complete Systems

Complete grate and pulp lifter systems for efficient replacement.

Mill-Specific

Grates designed for your specific mill discharge configuration.

Grates

Ball Mill Grates: Discharge Control for Grate Mills

Grate discharge ball mills use perforated grate panels to control the discharge of ground material while retaining grinding media inside the mill chamber. The grate aperture size—typically ranging from 6 mm to 30 mm depending on the grinding circuit—determines the maximum particle size that can pass into the discharge. Pulp lifters mounted behind the grate panels transport the classified slurry radially from the grate face to the discharge trunnion, enabling continuous removal of ground product. ATF manufactures grate panels from ASTM A532 chrome-moly steel (350–450 BHN) for standard abrasive applications, high-chrome white iron (600+ BHN) for maximum wear resistance, and natural rubber (60–70 Shore A) for anti-pegging performance in sticky or corrosive slurry environments. Each grate panel is precision-cast or machined to maintain consistent aperture dimensions across the full discharge face.

Grate design directly affects both product sizing accuracy and mill throughput capacity. Smaller apertures produce finer product but may restrict discharge capacity and increase the risk of pegging (aperture blockage by near-size particles), while larger apertures increase throughput but allow coarser particles to discharge, potentially overloading downstream classification equipment. The grate open area—typically 15–40% of the total panel surface—must balance these competing demands. Tapered slot profiles, where the aperture widens from the grinding face to the discharge side, improve slurry flow and reduce plugging compared with parallel-sided slots. ATF engineers grate systems optimised for your specific circuit requirements, considering target P80, ore characteristics, media size, slurry density, and downstream classifier capacity to deliver the best balance of throughput, product quality, and campaign life.

Custom Apertures
Alloy Steel
Rubber Options
Ball mill discharge grate panels manufactured by ATF

Discharge grate panels with optimised aperture patterns for efficient slurry removal and ball retention

OEM Compatibility

ATF manufactures grate systems for all ball mill makes with grate discharge configurations.

Metso Outotec

  • Grate discharge mills

FLSmidth

  • Grate discharge mills

ThyssenKrupp

  • Grate discharge mills

Custom Mills

  • Any grate discharge configuration

Need Ball Mill Grates?

Send your mill specifications for grate system recommendations.

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Material Options for Grates

Grate material selection considers both wear resistance and the potential for aperture plugging.

Chrome-Moly Steel

Dureté :350-450 BHN
Application :Standard grate panels
Notes :Good wear resistance

Natural Rubber

Dureté :60-70 Shore A
Application :Anti-pegging, corrosive slurries
Notes :Flexibility reduces plugging

Polyurethane

Dureté :85-95 Shore A
Application :Abrasive-corrosive conditions
Notes :Combines wear and corrosion resistance

Note: Grate aperture size significantly affects mill operation. Consult ATF for recommendations based on your circuit requirements.

FAQ

Grates FAQ

Trouvez les réponses aux questions courantes sur grates les matériaux, la sélection, la maintenance et les commandes. Vous ne trouvez pas ce que vous cherchez ?

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What causes grate plugging?
Grate plugging (also called pegging or blinding) most commonly results from apertures sized too close to the median particle size in the grinding product, allowing near-size particles to wedge into the slots. Additional causes include processing sticky or clay-rich ores that adhere to grate surfaces, excessive fines generation creating a compacted bed over the grate face, and aperture distortion from wear or thermal effects. Worn grates with enlarged and irregular apertures can also trap media fragments. Solutions include specifying tapered or flared slot profiles that widen from the grinding face toward the discharge side, selecting rubber grate panels whose inherent flexibility helps dislodge lodged particles, increasing aperture size by 2–4 mm while managing downstream classification, and maintaining consistent mill feed size to avoid surges of near-size material. ATF anti-pegging grate designs incorporate optimised slot geometry and material selection to minimise plugging frequency.
How do I select the right aperture size?
Aperture size selection requires balancing product quality, throughput, media retention, and plugging risk. The primary constraint is that apertures must be smaller than the smallest grinding media to prevent ball discharge—for example, if the smallest media is 25 mm, apertures should not exceed 20 mm with a safety margin. Beyond media retention, aperture size should be based on the target product size and downstream classification circuit capacity. A common guideline is to set apertures at 1.5 to 3 times the target P80 to allow free discharge while retaining oversize for further grinding. Grate open area (typically 15–40%) also affects throughput; higher open area increases capacity but requires more frequent inspection for wear-induced enlargement. ATF engineers use your circuit parameters—ore type, feed F80, target P80, media sizes, and slurry density—to recommend the optimal aperture size, slot geometry, and open area percentage.
When should grates be replaced?
Grates should be replaced when aperture dimensions enlarge beyond the specified tolerance, which typically occurs when slot widths increase by 30–50% from the original dimension, risking media discharge or loss of product size control. Replacement is also warranted when throughput drops due to extensive plugging that cannot be resolved by cleaning, or when structural integrity is compromised by cracking, breakout between slots, or excessive corrosion. During scheduled inspections, measure representative aperture widths across the grate face using go/no-go gauges or callipers and record the data to track wear trends. This allows maintenance planners to predict replacement timing and order grate panels with sufficient lead time—typically 6–10 weeks for custom configurations. ATF recommends inspecting grate panels at the same interval as shell liner inspections to capture the full wear picture and coordinate replacement schedules.

Contenu technique révisé par l'équipe d'ingénierie ATF | Spécifications métallurgiques vérifiées selon les normes ASTM/ISO

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