Milwaukee Paper - Effect of Impurities on Hardness of Cast Zinc or Spelter

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
G. C. Stone
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
4
File Size:
99 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1919

Abstract

AS the term "hardness" is used with many different meanings, it should be understood that it here means resistance to deformation by compression. It was determined by measuring the pressure, in pounds per square inch, necessary to reduce by 20 per cent., the length of cylinders 1 in. (25 mm.) in diameter by 2.6 in. (66 mm.) long. The tests were made at Columbia University on an Olsen 400,000-lb. machine, the load being applied at a constant rate of speed 0.0319 in. per min. The results were obtained by Messrs. Rigg and Williams, and some of them were given in a paper read at the Sixteenth Annual Meeting of the American Society for Testing Materials, in June, 1913. The remainder of the results were obtained in subsequent experiments by the same authors. In all cases, the results given are the averages of three or more closely concordant tests. All of the spelters tested were of standard commercial grades and all were of compositions making them good deliveries. The accompanying table gives the results arranged in the order of increasing hardness:
Citation

APA: G. C. Stone  (1919)  Milwaukee Paper - Effect of Impurities on Hardness of Cast Zinc or Spelter

MLA: G. C. Stone Milwaukee Paper - Effect of Impurities on Hardness of Cast Zinc or Spelter. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1919.

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