Robinson
Brick Co., Denver, Colorado., was formed in 1880 and is the oldest
and largest brick manufacturer in Colorado. Operating with approximately
250 employees, the company manufactures 100 million brick annually,
as well as an extensive line of natural rock and thin veneer brick
products marketed under such trade names as Robinson RockT and Old
Brick OriginalsT. Over the years, the company has established a reputation
for being the first in the industry to try new methods and new equipment.
In the '40s, it installed one of the West's first tunnel kilns. In
1959, it opened a state-of-the-art showroom, an industry first. Robinson
also installed the first robotic brick setting machine in the U.S.,
and in the fall of 1998, it became the first facing brick manufacturer
in North America to be registered under the ISO 9001 standard.
Robinson is also one of the most technologically
advanced manufacturing plants in the industry. It continually upgrades
its production operation, paying careful attention to quality. If
part of the company's system is not keeping pace with production,
the company quickly addresses the issue.
 |

Brick finished shown inside the store. |
About three
years ago, the primary crusher and the two hammer mills the company
used to process its clay began slowing production and causing daily
downtime. The hammer mills were high-maintenance and could not handle
the frequent swings in moisture content. Production was often reduced
to a crawl when the hammer mills encountered wet chunks of clay.
Maintenance
personnel were spending over five hours each night working on the
hammer mills, not to mention the additional time for the crusher
and associated feed belts. "We were constantly replacing the
tips and shanks on the hammer mills and balancing them. They had
to be extremely well balanced to handle the clay," said Tony
Fabrizio, Robinson Brick director of manufacturing and research
and development. "Between the primary crusher and the two
hammer mills,
replacement parts were costing us up to $20,000 a month, and the
man-hours to keep the crusher and hammer mills going were too high.
The inefficiency was not acceptable."
Along with Plant
Manager Mike Gomez, Fabrizio began searching for an alternative.
Easy
Operation and Maintenance
In
the fall of 2000, Robinson purchased a Stedman Grand Slam 4860
impact crusher, GS4860AR/HC-T-X, with a capacity range of 100-150
tons per hour (tph). "We chose the Stedman because it was the
most straightforward," Fabrizio said. "It was easy to
use and maintain, and was also cost-effective."
The new impactor
replaced both the primary jaw crusher and the two hammer mills that
had functioned as secondary and tertiary crushers, as well as a little-used pan grinder. During the initial reduction or first stage,
the breaker bars on the impactor impel material against the primary
apron. During the second stage, the reduced material passes through
to the second apron for final reduction. Both aprons allow precise
gap adjustment to ensure properly sized product for the specific
application.
The impactor
provides up to a 30:1 material reduction ratio for more properly
sized material the first time through. An open discharge on the
impactor eliminates any clogging or buildup of material exiting
the crushing chamber. The impactor also increases crushing capacity
and throughput so that the circuit runs more efficiently. It can
handle a wide variety of materials, ranging from wet and tacky to
hard and abrasive.
Maintenance on the impactor is designed
to be easy. The rotor breaker bars can be reversed or removed quickly,
often completed in only two hours and helping to minimize downtime.
Additionally, the front and rear housing on the impactor is hinged
and, when opened, provides unobstructed access to all areas of the
crushing chamber and rotor. The rotor lock table allows breaker
bars to be rotated or replaced by one person with a minimum of downtime.
Customized
Design
Another benefit of the new impactor
was that it was built to Robinson's specifications. One of the options
Robinson chose was an air cannon with a timer. The air cannon periodically
discharges a blast of air into the crushing area to dislodge dry
material buildup, thereby reducing cross-color contamination and
keeping buildup to a minimum. To further minimize buildup, Robinson
also had heaters installed on the aprons and nose liner of the housing.
The intake hood and the crusher support
structure were also customized for Robinson to simplify the mounting
of the Grand Slam Impactor. The impactor was also equipped with
a proximity switch on the front-hinged housing for disengaging the
crusher drive motor if the crusher should be opened while the rotor
is turning.
To give the plant additional control
over the product, Robinson Brick outfitted the new impactor with
its own variable frequency drive for the 300-hp crusher motor. The
drive allows the speed of the mill to be increased or decreased
to maintain the desired end product, and also helps when the moisture
content is higher than normal and greater speeds are required.
Feed hoppers meter the material into
a Grizzly feeder and directly into the new impactor. Feed size coming
into the impactor ranges from loose dirt to grapefruit-sized clay.
What emerges ranges in size from a fine powder to ½ in. particles.
The impactor processes a mixture of
100% clay and grog at the rate of 70 tph. With the old system, the
average was 65 tph. It operates 11 to 12 hours a day and handles
two feed streams-the clay feed from the Grizzly and the return feed.
Only about 10 to 15% are returns, impressive since past performance
realized a much larger return rate of 20-25%.
As the new impactor was being delivered,
an accident occurred just a mile from Robinson Brick and the impactor
was damaged so badly that it could not be installed. Robinson had
prepared for the installation and was ready to shut down the plant.
Stedman worked overtime to build a new impactor for Robinson. Within
six weeks, another impactor was constructed and ready to be installed.
"Stedman did an excellent job
for us. They took care of us, and that is what matters," Fabrizio
said.
Increased
Efficiency
Robinson is also pleased with the overall
service it's received from Stedman. "Whenever we've needed
assistance Stedman has been right there. The Stedman guys know what
they are doing, and we can get hold of them during off hours and
on the weekend," Fabrizio said.
Overall, the company is very satisfied
with its selection. "We are very pleased with the Stedman impactor.
It was the right choice. It has eliminated grinding downtime in
a big way," said Fabrizio.
Gomez adds, "For example, our
nightshift maintenance time was previously 6-8 hours each evening-now
it is typically 3 hours per night. Our overall down time on this
line, a combination of nightshift maintenance and operating time
lost during the day, was 10 to 12 hours daily, now it is only 3
hours in a 24 hour day, and that's incredible. And our monthly part
replacement cost has gone from $18,000-$20,000
[across both pieces of equipment] to only $6000."
Bob Jaster, president/COO of Robinson
Brick agreed. "[The new impactor] has effectively increased
grinding efficiency by 20%. I am really happy we bought it,"
he said.
For more
information about Robinson Brick Co., contact the company at 1845
West Dartmouth Ave., Denver, CO 80110-1308; (800) 477-9002; e-mail
sales@robinsonbrick.com; or visit www.robinsonbrick.com.
For more
information about the Grand Slam impactor, contact Joe Bennett or
David Vest at Stedman, 129 Franklin Street, P.O. Box 299, Aurora,
IN 47001; (800) 262-5401 or (812) 926-0038; fax (812) 926-3482;
e-mail: bcred@stedman-machine.com.
Back
to Stedman Press Room
|