Atlantic City Paper - Notes and Observations on Cast-Iron

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
J. E. Johnson
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
12
File Size:
464 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1905

Abstract

The brief contribution of Mr. West* furnishes a text for the present paper, which will, however, take a wider range, warranted by the writer's somewhat unusual opportunities for the study of the practice of the foundry as well as the blast-furnace, and especially of the production of satisfactory castings from iron of a composition altogether unsuitable, in the opinion of the average foundryman, for that purpose. Mr. West has observed that plates cast from direct-metal of a certain composition could be planed, whereas this would have been impracticable with cupola-metal of like composition; that furnace-metal has more " life " (i. e., fluidity, or a higher temperature) than cupola-metal; that it throws out much " kish," etc. And he suggests that blast-furnace managers may throw further light on the greater softness of direct-metal castings. Perhaps such light may be furnished to some extent by the present paper. The difference between cupola-metal and furnace- or direct-metal is, first of all, in the lower average sulphur-content of the latter. It has been proved by experiment that iron increases in its content of sulphur to a considerable extent with each remelting. More than thirty years ago Fairbairn showed that a certain iron after remelting 18 times had only five-
Citation

APA: J. E. Johnson  (1905)  Atlantic City Paper - Notes and Observations on Cast-Iron

MLA: J. E. Johnson Atlantic City Paper - Notes and Observations on Cast-Iron. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1905.

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