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Hot Screens
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Figure  8-8.–Dust  collector.
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Equipment Operator Advanced - Advanced construction equipmet operators manual
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Hot Bins

Figure 8-9.-Gradation control unit. transferred to a storage silo. This material is often used in the hot mix. When the material removed from the dust collector can  be  recombined  satisfactorily  with  the  aggregates  in the mix, some or all of it may be returned to the plant. The  amount  returned  depends  upon  the  combined grading of the finished mix. When the collected dust is unsatisfactory or is prohibited by the mix specifications, it  is  removed  from  the  bottom  of  the  collector  and wasted. Hot Screens After  the  aggregates  have  been  heated  and  dried, they are carried by a hot elevator to the gradation unit, In the gradation unit, the hot aggregate passes over a Figure  8-10.-Screen  wear. series  of  screens.  The  function  of  the  screens  is  to separate  the  hot  aggregate  into  the  specified  sizes accurately and deposit those sizes in hot bins. The gradation control unit (fig. 8-9) or screening unit  includes  a  set  of  several  different-sized  vibrating screens. The top screen is a scalping screen that rejects and carries off oversized aggregates. This is followed by one or two intermediate-sized screens, decreasing in size from the top to bottom. The very bottom screen is normally a sand screen. The effective screening area must be large enough to handle the maximum amount of feed delivered to separate the hot aggregates properly; therefore, the capacity of the screens should be checked against the capacity of the dryer and the capacity of the pugmill. When too much material is fed to the screens or the screen openings are plugged, many particles that should pass through ride over the screen and drop into a bin designated for larger sized aggregate. When screens are worn (fig. 8-10) or torn, resulting in enlarged openings and holes, oversized material will go into bins intended for  smaller  sized  aggregate.  Fine  aggregate  misdirected into  bins  intended  for  larger  aggregate  is  know  as “carry-over.” Carry-over can cause a lack of uniformity in the aggregate gradation and in the mixture. Additionally, excessive  carry-over  adds  to  the  amount  of  fine aggregate in the total mix, thus increasing the surface area to be coated with asphalt. Excessive carry-over, or its fluctuations, can be detected by a sieve analyses made from the contents of the individual hot bins and must be corrected  immediately.  Corrective  measures  include  the cleaning of screens, the regulation of the quantity of material coming from the cold feed, or a combination of both. Some carry-over is permitted in normal screening; 8-8

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