Atlantic City Paper - Notes on the Physics of Cast-Iron

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Richard Moldenke
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
8
File Size:
299 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1905

Abstract

In crowding the recent mass of work on the physics of cast-iron into the compass of a short review, I cannot do better than to follow the lines of Mr. W. R. Webster's suggestion, made at the Florida meeting of the Institute, March, 1895.' The classification of the properties of the metal, and the influences to which it is subjected during the various processes it undergoes, is quite complete; and as Mr. Webster gives it again in full in another paper at the present meeting, a simple reference to it now will be sufficient. I. Correspondence Between Chemical Composition, and Melting-Point, Fluidity, Shrinkage, Fracture,Chill, Micro-Structure, and Other Physical Properties. Melting-Point.—The melting-point of cast-iron had long been a subject of controversy among foundrymen. They knew that a hard iron melted faster than a soft one, but this effect was occasionally disputed, and the reasons given were unsatisfactory; but could not be well controverted. It was my good fortune to take the actual melting-temperatures of some 70 pig-irons and castings; the Le Chatelier pyrometer, suitably protected, being introduced into the interior, and the iron melted off in a specially-constructed cupola. The irons had been previously analyzed by taking the borings at the point of the intro-
Citation

APA: Richard Moldenke  (1905)  Atlantic City Paper - Notes on the Physics of Cast-Iron

MLA: Richard Moldenke Atlantic City Paper - Notes on the Physics of Cast-Iron. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1905.

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