All excellent ideas.
I did think of the air blow off and this may be a partial future solution. The difficulty is getting air to this unit.
I was not aware that loco's had solid axles, though now thinking about it, it should have been obvious. Jeez, the boss is right again.
arunmrao
Moving the mixer is a necessity. We do medium to very large castings (largest to date was 145 ton). We will be doing one this year that hits 210 ton, although this bay does not produce those larger ones. In any case, this mixer moves ~210 feet. Agreed that sand is one of the worst system contaminants to see in any arena. The problem here appears to be undue stresses on the drive units though. I see internal fractures and a broken shaft. Yes I feel some slight grittiness in the lube, but I don't see a need to do an expensive oil analysis. For one thing, I suspect the grit may have come from the R&R process. My boss wants to bring in a fab company to redesign the drive, whereas I agree with some of the previous posts, IE. we need more info! Boss sees that as one more unnecessary failure, and he's already getting alot of heat over this. Strain gauges & recorders are not that expensive. Whereas, $165K quote to fab a new drive sure as heck is in my book. One thing I've learned from reading this board & experience is when you fix one problem, ie beef something up, the next weakest link shows itself, and I may be right back where we were. Better to do a root cause analysis. That is what I am pushing for, more info. Get it right the first time.
Thanks to all. Appreciate the input.