The Effect Of The Presence Of A Small Amount Of Copper In Medium-Carbon Steel (de25c874-4120-4d68-8cc3-b5a1a7816cb8)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 113 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 4, 1918
Abstract
FRANK N. SPELLER,? Pittsburgh,. Pa.-Mr. -Hayward's paper again draws attention to the fact that copper in steel is not the enemy that a good many of us it one time thought it was. He shows clearly that steel with over 0.75 per cent. of copper is as dependable, under the :conditions which he describes, as the same steel without copper. I might add that you-can weld copper-steel- satisfactorily up to that point; in fact, we have succeeded in welding pipe by the lap weld process up to 1 per cent. copper. Notwithstanding the date that have been presented on the effects of copper on the physical properties and corrosion of steel, a maximum copper limitation is still found in many specifications. In some cases the limit is extremely low, such as below 0.05 .or 0.03: per cent., or thereabout. That is a relic of days gone by, and I think the practice should be discouraged. E. F. CONE, New York; N. Y.-Not so many years ago steel-casting makers were very particular as to the amount of copper that existed in the pig iron that they used. They would not use copper-bearing pig iron unless mixed with non-copper iron. I do not know what the practice now is in the particular foundry where I was metallurgist at one time,
Citation
APA: (1918) The Effect Of The Presence Of A Small Amount Of Copper In Medium-Carbon Steel (de25c874-4120-4d68-8cc3-b5a1a7816cb8)
MLA: The Effect Of The Presence Of A Small Amount Of Copper In Medium-Carbon Steel (de25c874-4120-4d68-8cc3-b5a1a7816cb8). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1918.