Papers - Hard Metal Carbides and Cemented Tungsten Carbide (Annual Lecture)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Samuel L. Hoyt
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
50
File Size:
4137 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1930

Abstract

Cemented tungsten carbide, a product of a branch of metallurgy which has never possessed more than a relatively minor interest and importance, has recently commanded the attention of engineers, industrialists, financiers and men of business. New methods, new opportunities, new goals, never before considered, have suddenly been brought within the scope of practical realization. It is these results that attract the interest of the world, but we, as engineers and metallurgists, will have equal interest in the product itself and in that branch of metallurgy from which it comes. It seems appropriate, therefore, to speak today on Hard Metal Carbides and Cemented Tungsten Carbide, as the latter represents one of the outstanding developments of recent date in non-ferrous metallurgy. We are interested in the hard metal carbides as a group of related metallic substances and in cemented tungsten carbide as the leading representative of the metallurgy of this group. The literature of this general field is limited, and, bearing this in mind, it seems advisable to attempt to cover the field broadly and to correlate the subject matter, rather than to present a detailed account of any one of its phases. Our annual lecture lends itself admirably to this plan. The quickened interest in cemented tungsten carbide, once its potentialities were recognized, the many sides to the problem of developing the manufacture and use of this new product, and the desire to economize as much as possible in the time of development, have brought many into this work, both in this country and abroad, notably the Osram Lamp Co. and Friedrich Krupp in Germany and the General Electric Co. in this country. It would be presuming too much to attempt to speak too broadly of the present state of the art and science of the hard metal carbides and my remarks arc guided largely by the work done in the General Electric Co., and by our associates in the Carboloy Co. Even here the activities of many in these two groups have centered around the utilization of cemented tungsten carbide, which is outside the scope of this talk. To those whose work is represented in this lecture, it is my pleasant duty to acknowledge their assistance and advice. To Dr. Zay
Citation

APA: Samuel L. Hoyt  (1930)  Papers - Hard Metal Carbides and Cemented Tungsten Carbide (Annual Lecture)

MLA: Samuel L. Hoyt Papers - Hard Metal Carbides and Cemented Tungsten Carbide (Annual Lecture). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1930.

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