Did my share of paxing over the last couple of weeks in Fokker 100s with Alliance flying over parts of the GAFA out to a couple of mine sites. Yep, there's still a whole lotta nothing out there except heat, red dust, rocks, scrub, flies oh and mines of course! Interesting to read about Alliance being the biggest user of Fokker 100's now for FIFO work. With resource prices improving, some mines have come out of care and maintenance so there is a bit of a resurgence in activity. Whilst the Fokker 100's are getting a bit long in the tooth, their utilisation is low meaning they could be around for some time.
https://blogs.crikey.com.au/planetalking/2015/11/25/alliance-does-big-fokker-deal-with-austrian-for-21-rare-jets/
"GAFA" below
20180313_153849_resized by Adam Dormer, on Flickr
CP Mining, Cape Preston (near Karratha) below. That grey hole in the ground will get a lot bigger in years to come! The processing plant (magnetite) is huge! This is the mob that Clive Palmer has been having a argument with over royalties. Oh, and one has to wear a respirator on-site due to there being asbestos in the ore - real fun in high 30's/low 40's heat!
20180313_154118_resized by Adam Dormer, on Flickr
Not aviation related (except for my mode of transport to and from these sites), this is one machine I was working on - a AG mill below. This baby has a 28 MW (that's mega watt folks) drive and can hold something like 1500 tonne of ore. It's job is to turn large rocks into much small rocks basically. I work on the load (weight) measurement systems on such mills - if there's too much load in the mill, they trip out on high current and that is a BIG problem! It means digging them out with the resultant loss of production.
20180314_083720_resized by Adam Dormer, on Flickr
Steel making at Liberty Onesteel in Whyalla. Onesteel (make structural steel) has a new Indian owner and he's planning on building up Onesteel which is great news for Whyalla - which would largely have died without such investment. This pic below shows just where the pig iron from the blast furnace is poured into the "convertor" where it becomes steel. It's the most awesome industrial process I think. Argon and oxygen is pumped into the pig iron and additives like aluminium, nickel, etc, etc are added to make the desired type of steel. Those ladles contain about 200 tonne of molten pig iron when full.
20180321_102813_resized by Adam Dormer, on Flickr