Pittsburgh Paper - Operation of Warwick Furnace, Pennsylvania, from August 27th, 1880, to September 1st, 1885

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 38
- File Size:
- 1579 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1886
Abstract
The experience of the past five years has furnished opportunities to study and to partially explain the operation and some of the causes of the short blast of Warwick Furnace at Pottstown, Pennsylvania, as described in the paper read at the Lake Superior Meeting, in August, 1880.* The many inquiries concerning the details of furnace operation which followed the publication of the paper, and the expressed desire of furnace managers to be informed as to future operations of this plant, have encouraged the preparation of the following data. To make the record continuous, and add to the value of both contributions, the present paper commences where the review of a short blast of Warwick Furnace ended, and includes the data of another short blast of two months, and a subsequent continuous campaign of nearly five years, which, by comparison, we shall designate as "the long blast." Frequent visits to the plant in the five years, during which its operation could be studied, and correspondence with the manager, Mr. Edgar S. Cook, have given a knowledge as to general features and details, and the courtesy of the officers of the Company which has given free access to the books of record permits the presentation of data which it is believed will be welcomed by furnace managers. Interest will undoubtedly be increased by the remarkable results which Mr. Cook has achieved chiefly with anthracite coal in a furnace whose details of construction will scarcely be generally admitted as embodying advanced ideas, its height being but 55 feet, with a bosh diameter of 15 feet 6 inches, its bosh-slope comparatively flat, its crucible smaller than the average, and the heat of the blast never reaching 1000' Fahrenheit. At present writing the credit of the best anthracite blast-furnace practice recorded in our Transactions is conceded to be that pursued by Mr. Fackenthal, at the Durham furnace, and Mr. Cook, at War-
Citation
APA:
(1886) Pittsburgh Paper - Operation of Warwick Furnace, Pennsylvania, from August 27th, 1880, to September 1st, 1885MLA: Pittsburgh Paper - Operation of Warwick Furnace, Pennsylvania, from August 27th, 1880, to September 1st, 1885. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1886.