MINExpo 2024: Martin Engineering unveils six new equipment designs

Martin Engineering, a leading manufacturer of belt conveyor and bulk material flow technology, will feature six new product designs in its booth at MINExpo 2024 in Las Vegas.
Ancillary Equipment / September 6, 2024
By Guy Woodford
Martin Engineering will be in the Central Hall booth #4315 at the Las Vegas Convention Center during MINExpo 2024. Pic: Martin Engineering

The friendly Martin team invites attendees to stop by booth #4315, right by the Central Hall entrance at the Las Vegas Convention Center on September 24-26 to see some of the latest innovations in belt cleaners, conveyor enclosure technology and flow aids.  Coming directly from the company’s Center for Innovation, these heavy-duty (HD) and extra-heavy-duty (XHD) accessories are designed to significantly improve efficiency while reducing dust emissions and offering safer maintenance/replacement.  The result is greater productivity with less labour for a lower cost of operation.

 

“Martin is celebrating its 80th anniversary by rolling out some excellent new products that extend equipment life, improve safety and reduce maintenance while also being better for the environment,” said Dave Mueller, Conveyor Products Manager for Martin Engineering.  “We’re excited to be able to display and demonstrate several products at the booth and give visitors an idea of their performance in real-world mining applications.  All the products have been thoroughly field tested to satisfy Martin’s high standard of quality and meet our Absolutely No Excuses Money Back Guarantee.”

 

Primary and secondary conveyor belt cleaners are going through a design renaissance.  Martin’s engineers have worked diligently to make installation and servicing easier and safer with less environmental waste.

 

Martin ECOSAFE Primary and Secondary Cleaners XHD withstand heavy-duty environments while using less urethane in their construction and mounted on a safe-to-service assembly with easily swapable individual cartridges.  The design allows the majority of the urethane to be used for the blade and less is used at the support base, which features a removable and reusable metal insert.  Using less urethane reduces waste while external servicing allows for easier and faster maintenance.

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Martin ECOSAFE Primary and Secondary Cleaners XHD. Pic: Martin Engineering

 

The CleanScrape primary and secondary cleaners revolutionized conveyor belt cleaning with four times the equipment life of standard urethane blades and eliminating the need for tensioning after installation.  The next iteration is the Heated CleanScrape Primary Cleaner, which is heat-traced within the blade, making it ideal for harsh sub-zero climates where frozen material buildup can affect performance and cause unnecessary downtime.

 

Requested by customers, the mining-grade Martin UBX Secondary Cleaner is designed as a longer-lasting and user-friendly alternative to similar units on the market.  Intended for wider and faster belts, the new Martin Engineering blade is made entirely of urethane or urethane with an embedded cleaning element that is more robust and longer-wearing than comparable blades on the market.  The blade is held snugly to the belt by a mechanical spring tensioner as opposed to the competitors’ troublesome air-supplied tensioners, which are unreliable, onerous to maintain and expensive to operate.  The result is a more economical unit with longer-lasting performance and less maintenance.

 

Wrapping up the new secondary blade offerings are the Martin SQC2S Cleaner with Orion HD and XHD Blades.  Following the successful introduction of the standard model, the more rugged version for wider and faster belts is engineered to handle the most punishing applications.  A two-tiered tensioning system with a spring tensioner on the assembly and another rubber tensioner on the blade attachment ensures the urethane and tungsten carbide blade needs considerably less monitoring and tensioning.  This low-maintenance approach is further supported by the attached polypropene deflector shield to mitigate buildup and usher material away from the mainframe.  An important safety feature is the slide-in/slide-out design, which allows service and blade replacement to be performed outside the conveyor structure.

 

While maintenance access and safe monitoring are vital, so is retaining a sealed environment to control airflow and suppress dust emissions.  The Martin Magnetic Inspection Door is a durable two-part design with a urethane shield and a strong magnetic seal that covers and protects a monitoring and maintenance space on the enclosure.  Keeping the dust inside, it is easily pulled back for inspection or, during scheduled shutdowns, pulled all the way down or off for improved access.

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Martin Urethane Skirting seals the enclosure and prevent spillage and dust emissions. Pic: Martin Engineering

 

The Martin Urethane Skirting is a long-lasting wear strip placed outside of the skirtboard of a conveyor loading zone to seal the enclosure and prevent spillage and dust emissions.  Produced to the belt’s specific trough angle, the urethane strip offers less friction on the belt edge of high-speed belts than rubber skirting for a longer belt life and less damage to the belt edge.

 

In addition to the new equipment, visitors will see how the superior design of Martin Engineering products like Martin Air Cannons and Industrial Vibrators can significantly improve the material flow through a system.  From choke points like silos and hoppers to screening and separators, strategically placed flow accessories prevent unscheduled downtime and improve safety by preventing manual clearing of obstructions.

 

“Since the pandemic, MINExpo 2024 will be the biggest show yet, so stop by and visit us at booth #4315 to see our exciting new offerings,” said Mueller.  “Technical experts with knowledge and experience in the mining industry will be manning the booth.  We like to think we’ve heard and seen it all, but MINExpo is always full of surprises, so we’d love to hear your story.  You never know, perhaps we can offer some wisdom to help solve the issue.  See you there!”

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