Manganese-Steel Rails (d12de1d5-8544-49a5-b4f5-a39d15f87b2b)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Sir Robert Hadfield
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
7
File Size:
1571 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 2, 1914

Abstract

SINCE the writer has been intimately connected with the development of manganese steel for many years, some remarks upon the early work with regard to the rolling and forging of this material might he of interest, and particularly as to the question of rails of special quality and of superior wearing qualities. In a paper on Iron Alloys, with Special Deference to Manganese Steel, read before this Institute at the International Engineering Congress in Chicago in 1893,1 the writer mentioned that, about 20 years ago, his firm in Sheffield produced railroad material, such as tires and axles, of forged and rolled manganese steel, thus showing that this product could be manipulated and worked up into the various required forms. The tires illustrated in the paper referred to above formed a particularly difficult class of work to produce in a special steel, but no special obstacles were met with Although there was no difficulty at that time in making and producing manganese steel in various forms, forged, rolled or pressed; nevertheless, on account of its higher expense, sufficient encouragement
Citation

APA: Sir Robert Hadfield  (1914)  Manganese-Steel Rails (d12de1d5-8544-49a5-b4f5-a39d15f87b2b)

MLA: Sir Robert Hadfield Manganese-Steel Rails (d12de1d5-8544-49a5-b4f5-a39d15f87b2b). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1914.

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