The largest machines in mining

The mine site has some of the largest machines and equipment on earth.
From trucks, excavators, draglines, through to bucket wheel excavators, the machines continually get bigger and bigger than found in other industries.
Australian Mining has trawled through the industry and brought you a list of the biggest machines and equipment in their category.
Bucket Wheel Excavator
The Bagger 293, also know, as the Man Takraf RB293, was built in 1995 and measure 96 metres in height. Coming in at 225 meters long is weighs 14 200 tonnes and requires five people to operate it.
The Bucket wheel itself is more than 21 metres in diameter and has 20 buckets, which can hold more than 15 cubic metres each.
The machine is capable of chewing through 240 000 cubic metres of dirt in a single day.
Hydraulic Shovel
It has a max power of 3360kW and a bucket capacity of 50 cubic metres.
It also made an appearance in the second transformers film, as the Decepticon Demolisher.
However, Cat has now pipped it at the post following its acquisition of Terex /Bucyrus. Cat’s new 6090FS hydraulic shovel is the world’s largest by capacity, just outdoing the RH400 with a bucket capacity of 52 cubic metres.
Haul Truck
To get around site and take the weight of the payload it is fitted with eight wheels, the same size used on the 360, with two turntables axles.
Dozer
It measures 4.88 metres tall, 12.5 metres long, and 7.3 metres wide.
Crusher
The mobile crusher is installed at a Kazakh mine, and weighs 368 tonnes, and has a capacity of 2268 tonnes per hour.
Wheel Loader
Dragline
The machine, the only Bucyrus 4250-W ever built, was the largest single bucket digging machine ever developed. It cost approximately $159 million in today’s terms and took nearly two years to build.
It weighed 12 000 tonnes, and had a bucket capacity of 170 cubic metres. It measured 67.82 metres in height, had a boom of 94 metres, and a width of 46.18 metres. It was powered by 18 750kW and 10 466kW DC electric motors.
In operation for more than two decades, Big Muskie shifted more than 465 million cubic metres of overburden. Increasing electricity costs, efficiency issues, and tighter environmental regulations made Big Muskie unprofitable to operate, and it eventually shut down in 1991. It had an ignoble end, and was broken down and scrapped in 1999.
Borer
It weighs 4364 tonnes and has a thrust force of 316 000kN at 400bar.
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