New York Paper - Metallographic Investigation of Transverse-fissure Rails with Special Reference to High-phosphorous Streaks (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
G. F. Comstock
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
51
File Size:
3573 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1920

Abstract

The subject of transverse fissures in steel rails has been discussed very thoroughly in recent years from various points of view and the final opinions expressed may be roughly classified into two groups: That these fissures are the result merely of fatigue of the steel and are independent of the quality of the metal. That the quality of the metal and the mill practice must have something to do with them. The first point of view was most ably and logically presented by J. E. Howard,' and in the discussion of this paper, as well as in several other preceding publications, Dr. P. H. Dudley, Consulting Engineer of the New York Central Lines, has strongly defended the other opinion.2 The steel makers of the country have naturally rallied under Mr. Howard's banner, hoping to place the entire blame for these failures upon the railroads with their high wheel-loads, hard steel, heavy traffic, and sometimes inferior road-bed; while the railroad men, on the other hand, have been busy accumulating statistics and records in the effort to find an actual reason in the rails themselves that would account for the seemingly haphazard occurrence of transverse fissures under varying conditions and at widely separated points. The view that these fissures were due merely to normal fatigue under alternating stresses seemed most reasonable to the writer until quite recently, because from work done in this laboratory, as well as the work of other investigators, of the problem, no structural differences, in the vast majority of cases, were found between metal at the nuclei of transverse fissures and metal at similar positions in the same rails or in other rails that had not developed fissures. Within the last year or two, however, since the method of etching polished sections for the microscope with a oupric chloride solution has been tried systematically on lengthwise sections, passing through the nuclei of transverse fissures, evidence
Citation

APA: G. F. Comstock  (1920)  New York Paper - Metallographic Investigation of Transverse-fissure Rails with Special Reference to High-phosphorous Streaks (with Discussion)

MLA: G. F. Comstock New York Paper - Metallographic Investigation of Transverse-fissure Rails with Special Reference to High-phosphorous Streaks (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1920.

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