Buffalo Paper - Anthracite and Coke, Separate and Mixed, in the Warwick Blast-Furnace

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Edgar S. Cook
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
6
File Size:
250 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1889

Abstract

The Warwick furnace at Pottstown, Pa., constructed for anthracite fuel, is, as may be remembered, 554 feet high, with 15; feet bosh. The actual working height from stock-line to bottom is only 474 feet, the bell-and-hopper taking up 8 feet. During the year 1886 we used mixed fuel, in the proportion of three-fourths anthracite and one-fourth coke. The total product of iron was 30,6299 tons of 2280 lbs., being a weekly average of 589 tons, including all ordinary and extraordinary stoppages. Deducting the latter, the weekly average would be about 600 tons. The fuel-consumption for the year was 1.2 tons per ton of iron, while the ore-mixture yielded 52 per cent. of iron. For about two months during the summer of 1887 we were obliged to run on anthracite exclusively, owing to the Connellsville coke strike. In the fall of 1885, in relining the furnace, the crucible had been built 8 feet 9 inches in diameter, with the view of using regularly one-quarter of coke (the largest previous diameter having been 7 feet 5 inches), and we felt somewhat apprehensive of the results when compelled to use anthracite only. The average of seven weeks' run on coal, as compared with the average of the seven corresponding weeks of 1886 (using one-quarter coke), was as follows:
Citation

APA: Edgar S. Cook  (1889)  Buffalo Paper - Anthracite and Coke, Separate and Mixed, in the Warwick Blast-Furnace

MLA: Edgar S. Cook Buffalo Paper - Anthracite and Coke, Separate and Mixed, in the Warwick Blast-Furnace. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1889.

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