Manufacture of Steel for Rope Wire

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Fred A. Webber
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
3
File Size:
1622 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1957

Abstract

STEEL ROPE WIRE is one of the more specialized commodities among the many grades of highcarbon steel wires. In its production there are many metallurgical aspects of interest from the steelmaking on through the final stages of wire drawing. We produce rope wire in an integrated mill com prising all the operations from the blast furnaces to finished wire drawing in the wire mills. Steelmaking is carried out with close control on hot metal, selection of scrap, and fluxing materials. The basic open hearths are of 170 tons capacity. Steel is teemed into 19 1/2 in by 19 1/2 in big-end-down molds and is hot-topped with the use of clay refractory hot-tops. The weight of this ingot is 6,900 pounds. All high -carbon steel ingots are charged hot into the soaking pits and are then rolled through the blooming mill in 16 p asses to a bloom ax~ in. by 41/2 in. and approximately 65 feet long. Necessary bottom and top crops are taken on the bloom as it passes from the blooming? mill to the billet mill. The still hot bloom is continuously rolled through the billet mill in . 5 passes to a 2 3/8 in. square. Billets are cut to 32 feet in length by a flying shear and then allowed to cool on the hot bed.
Citation

APA: Fred A. Webber  (1957)  Manufacture of Steel for Rope Wire

MLA: Fred A. Webber Manufacture of Steel for Rope Wire. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1957.

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