Just got back from what will probably be the last bucketwheel excavator coal mine in the US. The BWE at the Big Brown Mine burned awhile back and is being parted out/scrapped/buried (conveyor caught fire). These pictures are of the last working BWE on a coal mine in the US; it's at the Monticello Winfield Mine near Mt. Pleasant, TX. (Home of Priefert panels, gates, and chutes for you ranchers and rodeoers. Yes, you can buy seconds at their factory.)

Discovery Channel was here last summer for about a week filming. I haven't seen the show though.

I took the first picture about two years ago; I didn't get a good overview this week. Shows an overview of the BWE and crosspit spreader and two draglines working the pit. The dragline boom is about 330 feet long. The other photos are from the past couple of days.

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The crosspit spreader is about 800 feet long.

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The Bucketwheel is about 40 feet in diameter. It can move 80-85 feet vertically. That is a D9 feeding.

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Standing under the crosspit spreader looking at the BWE. The pads on the spreader are about 13 feet each.

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Looking down on the BWE from the top of the spreader. The feed belt from the BWE stretches to the left. The belt dump to the spreader grizzly is on the far left.

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Hitachi(?) hoe working to drain a mud pit in advance of the BWE.

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Just a view down pit. That is another dragline boom over the spoils. As you can tell, they recover two seams.

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I like big stuff. And, if I get stuck while I'm working, it's easy to pull me out no matter how bad the stuck <img src="/forums/images/graemlins/lol.gif" alt="" />


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