The Importance of Conveyor Belt Maintenance
Conveyor belts are the arteries of any crushing or processing plant — they transport thousands of tons of material every day. A conveyor breakdown can halt an entire production line. Regular belt maintenance prevents 90% of common belt failures and extends conveyor life significantly.
Understanding Your Conveyor Belt
Belt Construction:
- Carcass: The load-bearing internal structure (fabric plies or steel cord)
- Covers: Rubber outer surfaces that protect the carcass and provide grip
- Skirts: Side seals that contain material on the belt
- Splices: Joined ends that create an endless belt
Common Belt Types:
- Fabric belt (NN, EP, PP): Multiple fabric plies with rubber interlayers
- Steel cord belt: Continuous steel cables for high-strength applications
- Chevron belt: Cleated surface for steep inclines
Daily Inspection Checklist
Visual Inspection Points:
- Check belt tracking — belt should run centered on all pulleys
- Inspect belt surface for cuts, tears, holes or excessive wear
- Check splice area — look for delamination, separation or protruding edges
- Verify belt tension — proper sag between idlers (typically 2-3% of span)
- Inspect loading zone — impact bars and skirt seals
- Check belt cleaner and scraper condition
- Look for material spillage at idlers and transfer points
- Verify all pulley and idler bearings are lubricated
Belt Tracking Adjustment
Belt mistracking causes edge damage, material spillage and premature idler wear. The most common causes and corrections:
Troughing Idlers (Center Belt Runs to One Side):
- Adjust the idler set on the side the belt is running toward — tilt slightly in direction of travel
- Make small adjustments (3-5mm increments) and wait for belt to stabilize
- Check idler frame is level and square to belt
- Verify belt is not overloaded on one side of trough
Tail Pulley (Belt Runs to One Side):
- Adjust the tail pulley angle — moving the pulley in the direction the belt is running typically corrects tracking
- For crowned pulleys, check if belt has shifted off the crown
- Inspect for material buildup on pulley causing diameter variation
Drive Pulley (Belt Runs to One Side):
- Move the pulley in the direction the belt is running to steer the belt toward center
- Ensure pulley is square to the belt frame
- Check for worn or damaged lagging causing uneven grip
Regular Conveyor Belt Inspection Prevents Costly Failures
Splice Inspection and Maintenance
The splice is the weakest point on a conveyor belt. Regular splice inspection is critical to prevent catastrophic failure.
What to Inspect:
- Look for separation between rubber cover and top plies
- Check for protruding cable or fabric edges
- Verify mechanical fasteners are secure and level
- For vulcanized splices, check for voids or incomplete bond
- Measure remaining rubber thickness at splice edges
Splice Life Expectancy:
- Mechanical fasteners: 6-24 months depending on belt quality and conditions
- Vulcanized splices: 3-10 years with proper installation and care
- Steel cord splices: Should last 5+ years in proper conditions
When to Replace Splicing Materials:
- Replace fasteners when wear approaches the limit marks
- Vulcanized splices showing any separation should be re-spliced
- Loose or missing clips indicate immediate replacement needed
Pulley Lagging
Pulley lagging provides traction between the belt and drive/terminal pulleys. Worn lagging causes belt slip, reduced drive efficiency and premature belt wear.
Types of Lagging:
- Rubber lagging (plain): Standard friction surface, moderate wear life
- Ceramic lagging: Excellent grip, long life, higher cost
- Herringbone rubber: Grooved pattern for water and debris resistance
Lagging Replacement Criteria:
- Remaining thickness below 50% of original
- Grooves worn smooth — loss of traction
- Delamination from pulley body
- Damaged edges causing belt edge damage
Quick Belt Repairs
Punctures and Small Holes:
- Use cold vulcanizing repair kits for rubber belts
- Clean damaged area thoroughly before applying patch
- Apply pressure during cure time for proper bond
- Patch should extend 50mm beyond damage in all directions
Edge Damage:
- Clip or cut damaged edges to prevent tearing propagation
- Install edge repair strip or V-guide to protect remaining edge
- For severe edge wear, consider belt re-splicing to remove damaged section
Tears:
- Small tears (<50mm): Cold vulcanizing repair strip
- Medium tears (50-200mm): Full-thickness repair patch
- Large tears (>200mm): Requires professional vulcanizing or belt replacement
Carryback Management
Material sticking to the belt and falling off idlers (carryback) creates spillage, housekeeping problems and safety hazards.
Solutions:
- Belt cleaners: Install primary and secondary scraper blades at head pulley
- V-plow: Removes material from return belt before tail pulley
- Skirt seals: Adjust to maintain contact with belt
- Anti-stick coatings: UHMWPE liners in discharge chutes reduce adhesion
- Regular cleaning: Schedule periodic wash-down of return belt section
Preventive Maintenance Schedule
- Daily: Visual inspection, belt tracking check, cleanup of spillage
- Weekly: Belt cleaner adjustment, idler rotation check, lubrication
- Monthly: Splice inspection, pulley lagging condition, carryback system check
- Quarterly: Full belt inspection, take-up tension check, structure inspection
- Annual: Complete conveyor overhaul, belt thickness measurement, full replacement plan




