First Lensman E. E. Smith (superbooks4u txt) đ
- Author: E. E. Smith
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âWhat I want to know is, why is this damned water-pump overloading? Whatâs the circuit?â
âYou must beâ ââ ⊠yes, you are pumping against too much head. Five levels above you are dead, you know, so.â ââ âŠâ
âDead? Canât you raise anybody?â
âNot yet. So youâre pumping through dead boosters on Eleven and Ten and so on up, and when your overload-relief valve opens.â ââ âŠâ
âRelief valve!â Jones almost screamed, âCan I dog the damn thing down?â
âNo, itâs internal.â
âChrist, what a designâ âI could eat a handful of iron filings and puke a better emergency pump than that!â
âWhen it opens,â Stanley went stolidly on, âthe water will go through the bypass back into the sump. So youâd better rod out one of the glory holes and.â ââ âŠâ
âGet conscious, fathead!â Jones blazed. âWhat would we use for time? Get off the airâ âgimme Emerson!â
âEmerson speaking.â
âGot your maps?â
âYes.â
âWe got to run a sag up to Elevenâ âfastâ âor drown. Can you give me the shortest possible distance?â
âCan do.â The Head Surveyor snapped orders. âWeâll have it for you in a minute. Thank God there was somebody down there with a brain.â
âIt doesnât take superhuman intelligence to push buttons.â
âYouâd be surprised. Your point on glory holes was very well takenâ âyou wonât have much time after the pump quits. When the water reaches the Station.â ââ âŠâ
âCurtains. And itâs all done nowâ ârunning free and easyâ ârecirculating. Hurry that dope!â
âHere it is now. Start at the highest point of Stope Fifty Nine. Repeat.â
âStope Fifty-Nine.â Jones waved a furious hand as he shouted the words; the tight-packed miners turned and ran. The shift-boss followed them, carrying the walkie-talkie, aiming an exasperated kick of pure frustration at the merrily-humming water pump as he passed it.
âThirty two degrees from the verticalâ âanywhere between thirty and thirty five.â
âThirty to thirty five off vertical.â
âDirectionâ âgot a compass?â
âYes.â
âSet the blue on zero. Course two hundred seventy five degrees.â
âBlue on zero. Course two seven five.â
âDex sixty nine point two zero feet. Thatâll put you into Elevenâs class yardâ âso big you canât miss it.â
âDistance sixty nine point twoâ âthat all? Fine! Maybe weâll make it, after all. Theyâre sinking a shaft, of course. From where?â
âAbout four miles in on Six. Itâll take time.â
âIf we can get up into Eleven weâll have all the time on the clockâ âitâll take a week or more to flood Twelveâs stopes. But this sag is sure as hell going to be touch and go. And say, from the throw of the pump and the volume of the sump, will you give me the best estimate you can of how much time weâve got? I want at least an hour, but Iâm afraid I wonât have it.â
âYes. Iâll call you back.â
The shift-boss elbowed his way through the throng of men and, dragging the radio behind him, wriggled and floated up the rise.
âWright!â he bellowed, the echoes resounding deafeningly all up and down the narrow tube. âYou up there ahead of me?â
âYeah!â that worthy bellowed back.
âMore men left than I thoughtâ âhow manyâ âhalf of âem?â
âJust about.â
âGood. Sort out the ones you got up there by trades.â Then, when he had emerged into the now brilliantly illuminated stope, âWhere are the timber-pimps?â
âOver there.â
âRustle timbers. Whatever you can find and wherever you find it, grab it and bring it up here. Get some twelve-inch steel, too, six feet long. Timbermen, grab that stuff off of the face and start your staging right here. You muckers, rig a couple of skoufers to throw muck to bury the base and checkerwork up to the hanging wall. Doze a sluiceway down into that waste pocket there, so we wonât clog ourselves up. Work fast, fellows, but make it solidâ âyou know the load itâll have to carry and what will happen if it gives.â
They knew. They knew what they had to do and did it; furiously, but with care and precision.
âHow wide a sag you figurinâ on, Supe?â the boss timberman asked. âEight foot checkerwork to the hangin,â anyway, huh?â
âYes. Iâll let you know in a minute.â
The surveyor came in. âForty one minutes is my best guess.â
âFrom when?â
âFrom the time the pump failed.â
âThat was four minutes agoâ ânearer five. And five more before we can start cutting. Forty one less ten is thirty one. Thirty one into sixty nine point two goes.â ââ âŠâ
âTwo point two three feet per minute, my slip-stick says.â
âThanks. Wright, what would you say is the biggest sag we can cut in this kind of rock at two and a quarter feet a minute?â
âUmâ ââ ⊠mâ ââ ⊠m.â The miner scratched his whiskery chin. âThatâs a tough one, boss. Youâll hafta figure damn close to a hundred pounds of air to the foot on plain cuttinââ âthatâs two hundred and a quarter. But without a burley to pimp for âer, a rotary canât take that kind of airâ âsheâll foul herself to a standstill before she cuts a foot. Anâ with a burley rigginâ sheâs got to make damn near a double cutâ âseven foot inside figgerâ âso any way you look at it you ainât goinâ to cut no two foot to the minute.â
âI was hoping you wouldnât check my figures, but you do. So weâll cut five feet. Saw your timbers accordingly. Weâll hold that burley by hand.â
Wright shook his head dubiously. âWe donât want to die down here any more than you do, boss, so weâll do our damndestâ âbut how in hell do you figure you can hold her to her work?â
âRig a yoke. Cut a stretcher up for canvas and padding. Itâll pound, but a man can stand almost anything, in short enough shifts, if heâs got to or die.â
And for a timeâ âtwo minutes, to be exact, during which the rotary chewed up and spat out a plug of rock over five feet deepâ âthings went very well indeed. Two men, instead of the usual three, could run the rotary; that is, they could tend the complicated pneumatic walking jacks which not only oscillated the cutting demon in a geometrical path, but also rammed it against the face with a steadily held and enormous pressure, even while climbing almost vertically upward under a burden of
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