Hot Dip Tinning Operations at Port Kembla

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 28
- File Size:
- 4588 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1958
Abstract
A commonplace, sometimes overlooked or taken for granted, article of everyday existence is the tin can. Produced from thin gauge low carbon steel, and commonly coated with a mere 60 millionths of an inch of pure tin, the product is however strong and corrosion resistant. Tin-plate serves a myriad of purposes-the most important being to meet the requirements of the canning industry. Australia's newest steel product, tin-plate, was first produced on a commercial scale during the early part of August, 1957. The commissioning of the Hot Dip Tinning Plant (Fig. 1) of The Broken Hill Proprietary Co. Ltd. at Port Kembla, marked the culmination of a proposal dating back to 1939, the advent of World War II having caused its deferment to the present time.Cornish tin is known to have been exported as early as 300 B.C. to Syria and tinned vessels existed even in the year A.D. 23. The tin coating of plate could be described as an ancient art, believed to have had its origin in Bohemia in the thirteenth century. During the next 450 years, the process spread through Saxony to Pontypool in Monmouthshire, but it was a further half century before any measure of success was obtained.Perhaps the two greatest milestones in tin-plate manufacture were the rolling of iron plates first carried out in 1728, thereby outmoding the hammer formed sheet, and more recently, the development of the electro-deposition process. By the nineteenth century, several important changes had arisen; namely, the substitution of steam for water power, coke for charcoal in the production of the base metal, and...
Citation
APA: (1958) Hot Dip Tinning Operations at Port Kembla
MLA: Hot Dip Tinning Operations at Port Kembla. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1958.