Piping And Segregation Of Ingots Of Steel And Ductility-Tests For Open-Hearth Steel Rails.

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
P. H. Dudley
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
29
File Size:
1160 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 4, 1913

Abstract

THE piping and segregation of ingots of steel is a comprehensive subject, and must be studied in reference to the different grades of soft, medium, and hard steel, rather than to discuss it in a general manner, as though applicable to all grades. Rail steel, however, will receive the most consideration in this paper, for the wheel-loads of the motive pourer and rolling stock have doubled from 1890 to 1910. Steel rails and tires which were efficient under the light loads, became less serviceable under the double wheel-loads, quadrupled tonnage, and higher speeds. Bessemer Steel. Bessemer steel of froth 0.10 to 0.15 per cent. of carbon, for splice-bars, spikes, and tie-plates, rises in setting, and is cast in bottle-mouthed molds, which must be capped to prevent an over-flow from the top. This grade of steel rises in the molds and makes a longer ingot than the volume of molten steel when first teemed. The ingots which are allowed to cool and then cut open, show, particularly in the upper part, large occluded blow-holes, and when they are Dot oxidized or do not contain foreign matter, weld more or less completely when the steel is rolled or forged above 1,100° C., and it :is in this way that the blow-holes are closed it the low-carbon steels.
Citation

APA: P. H. Dudley  (1913)  Piping And Segregation Of Ingots Of Steel And Ductility-Tests For Open-Hearth Steel Rails.

MLA: P. H. Dudley Piping And Segregation Of Ingots Of Steel And Ductility-Tests For Open-Hearth Steel Rails.. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1913.

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