Crucibles of all sizes
are used to transport metal from the potlines to casthouses countless times a
day with no incidents. But the potential exists of an incident. The Aluminium
Plant Safety Blog has posted incidents involving crucibles that tipped over,
that cracked and were leaking metal, etc. Here is a recent incident emphasizing
the potential hazard that exists with a piece of equipment that sometimes gets
overlooked in our industry.
A crucible used to
transport molten metal caught fire on Monday night, July 30, 2018 at a smelter
in Canada. The fire, which caused a thick column of smoke, was controlled by
the company's firefighters and the crucible was secured, said the smelter spokesman
in Canada. The incident occurred around 7:30 pm the spokeswoman said no one was
hurt and there was no impact on production. She mentioned that the company was
taking this incident seriously and was going to investigate to determine the
circumstances of this incident to prevent such a situation from reoccurring.
We are glad no one was
injured in this incident. This
incident could have been much much worse. For example these types of incidents
in the steel industry where molten metal is leaking from a crucible for more
deaths than any other hazard. Luckily for this plant it appears the crucible
was on a trailer when the fire occurred. The news media does not state if any
molten metal escaped or not. We are confident that this plant will investigate
and if determine if any changes need to be made to prevent this from occurring.
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