Common Conveyor Failures in Mining Plants
Conveyor systems are the backbone of most mining and mineral processing plants. From crushing circuits to stockpile management, conveyors move thousands of tonnes of material every hour.
However, when conveyor systems fail, the consequences can be significant — including plant downtime, material spillage, safety risks, and increased maintenance costs.
In many cases, the underlying issues are not complex mechanical failures but design, alignment, or material flow problems that develop over time.
The following are some of the most common conveyor failures seen across mining operations.
1. Belt Misalignment
One of the most frequent problems in mining conveyors is belt mistracking.
When the belt drifts to one side of the conveyor structure it can:
damage rollers and idlers
wear conveyor skirts
cause material spillage
damage the belt edge
Misalignment often originates at transfer points where material enters the belt unevenly.
Proper transfer chute design and conveyor alignment are essential to prevent this issue.
2. Transfer Chute Blockages
Transfer chutes are responsible for directing material from one conveyor to another.
If the chute geometry is poorly designed, problems can occur such as:
material build-up
plugging or choking
uncontrolled material flow
excessive dust and spillage
Modern chute design often uses 3D modelling and flow analysis to optimise material movement.
3. Roller and Idler Failures
Rollers operate continuously in harsh mining environments.
Common failure causes include:
bearing contamination
excessive load
belt misalignment
material ingress
Once rollers seize, they can quickly damage the belt and increase energy consumption.
4. Conveyor Spillage
Material spillage around transfer points is one of the most visible signs of conveyor system problems.
Spillage may result from:
poor chute design
incorrect skirtboard sealing
uneven belt loading
belt tracking problems
Over time, spillage creates housekeeping issues and additional maintenance requirements.
Improving Conveyor Reliability
Improving conveyor reliability often requires looking beyond maintenance and focusing on engineering design and plant layout.
Engineering tools such as 3D laser scanning and digital plant modelling allow engineers to capture existing conditions and analyse conveyor systems before upgrades or shutdowns.
This approach reduces design errors and helps identify reliability issues before modifications are installed.
You can read the full article here:
👉 https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/common-conveyor-failures-mining-plants/
Engineering Support for Mining Plants
Hamilton By Design provides engineering support for mining and industrial plants including:
Mechanical engineering design
Conveyor and chute design
Structural steel drafting
Engineering grade 3D laser scanning
Point cloud to engineering model workflows
These services help mining operations improve plant reliability and reduce shutdown risks.
Learn more:
👉 https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/mining-mechanical-engineering-design/
Related Engineering Articles
Further reading:
• https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/reducing-shutdown-risk-digital-engineering-models/
• https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/engineering-preparation-mining-shutdowns/
• https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/mining-mechanical-engineering-design/
