Understanding Belt Slip
Belt slip occurs when the friction between the drive pulley surface and the belt underside is insufficient to transmit the required drive force. The pulley rotates but the belt does not move at the same speed β?or stops entirely while the pulley continues spinning. This causes rapid and severe heat damage to both the belt cover and pulley lagging, and can ignite coal dust in underground mining environments.
β οΈ Fire Risk
Belt slip on a drive pulley generates intense frictional heat. On underground coal conveyors, sustained belt slip is a primary cause of conveyor belt fires. All underground conveyors must have automatic belt slip detection that stops the drive within seconds of slip being detected.
Root Causes of Belt Slip
1. Insufficient Belt Tension
The most common cause. The friction force that a pulley can transmit to a belt is proportional to the belt tension on the tight side. If belt tension is too low β?due to a jammed take-up, stretched belt, or incorrect counterweight β?the drive cannot transmit the required torque without slipping.
Fix: Check take-up travel and ensure counterweight is correct for the belt tension requirement. On gravity take-ups, verify counterweight mass. On screw take-ups, increase tension and verify the belt has not elongated beyond take-up range.
2. Worn or Smooth Pulley Lagging
New rubber lagging has a friction coefficient of approximately 0.35β?.4 (wet) to 0.45β?.5 (dry). Worn lagging can drop to 0.15β?.2, dramatically reducing drive capacity. Lagging worn smooth is a very common cause of slip on older conveyors.
Fix: Inspect lagging for wear, glazing, hardening or missing sections. Replace when lagging thickness has worn to 50% of original. Use diamond-groove or herringbone-groove lagging pattern for wet conditions.
3. Belt Cover Contamination
Oil, grease, water, or fine mineral slurry on the belt underside or pulley surface reduces friction dramatically. Even a thin film of process water on a smooth lagged pulley can reduce friction coefficient by 50%.
Fix: Identify and eliminate contamination source. Install belt scrapers to keep the underside clean. Consider ceramic lagging (friction coefficient 0.4β?.45 wet) for permanently wet applications.
4. Conveyor Overloaded
Attempting to start a conveyor under full load, or a blockage downstream causing material to pile up, increases the required drive torque beyond what the current belt tension can transmit.
Fix: Never start a conveyor under full load unless the drive is specifically designed for it. Install a belt load monitor and interlock to prevent starting with material on belt. Clear blockages before restarting.
5. Drive Undersized
If the conveyor has been modified (longer, steeper, higher tonnage) since the original drive was installed, the original drive may no longer have sufficient power. The belt will slip when the conveyor is fully loaded or on inclines.
Fix: Recalculate drive power requirements for current operating conditions. Upgrade motor or gearbox if required.
Lagging Selection Guide
| Application | Lagging Type | Friction Coeff. (wet) | Life |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dry, indoor conveyor | Plain rubber, 10β?2mm | 0.35β?.40 | 3β? years |
| Wet / outdoor conveyor | Diamond groove rubber, 12β?5mm | 0.35β?.40 | 3β? years |
| Very wet / slurry conditions | Ceramic tile (92% AlβOβ? | 0.40β?.45 | 8β?2 years |
| High tension conveyor | Weld-on ceramic, 15β?0mm | 0.40β?.45 | 8β?2 years |
| Underground coal mine | FR rubber, diamond groove | 0.35β?.40 | 3β? years |
π‘ Quick Check: Is Your Lagging Still Good?
Press your thumbnail firmly into the lagging. If your nail leaves a clear impression, the rubber is still elastic and serviceable. If the rubber is hard and your nail leaves no mark, the lagging has hardened and its friction coefficient is severely reduced β?replace it.
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