Erosion of Guns-The Hardening of the Surface (FULL PAGE)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Henry Fay
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
13
File Size:
701 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 4, 1917

Abstract

THE CHAIRMAN (ALBERT SAUVEUR, Cambridge, Mass.).-In forcing us to face and to discuss the important question of erosion of steel guns, Prof. Fay is performing a public service. His investigation has been fruitful and his results illuminating and suggestive. It is not in a spirit of adverse criticism, therefore, that I venture a few remarks suggested by his paper, but rather to add my mite to the discussion in the hope that it may not be entirely without value. Prof. Fay considers it conclusively demonstrated that the hard layers forming in the inside of guns of large calibers after they have been fired a number of times consist of martensite. Still, he admits that he never was able to detect in the hard layers the structural characteristics of martensite. This leads him to conceive the existence of amorphous martensite. We may well hesitate before accepting this theory on the strength of the evidence offered. Martensite, as we know it, is essentially a crystalline condition assumed by a close association of iron and carbon, possibly if not probably of the nature of a solid solution. Lacking this crystalline character we are hardly justified in calling it martensite on the ground, merely, of its being very hard.
Citation

APA: Henry Fay  (1917)  Erosion of Guns-The Hardening of the Surface (FULL PAGE)

MLA: Henry Fay Erosion of Guns-The Hardening of the Surface (FULL PAGE). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1917.

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