Too Much Wasteful Bulk in the Raw Materials for the Iron Blast Furnace

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Ralph H. Sweetser
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
2
File Size:
175 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1939

Abstract

OF SPECIAL importance in the design and construction of an iron blast-furnace plant are tile raw materials to be employed. Obviously the iron must come from some ore of that metal, but the many kinds available lead to important differences in plant arrangement, and in the design of furnaces and accessory equipment. For instance, the bulk of the gangue in the ore is subject to wide variation as is that of the ash in the fuel. A gradual increase in the bulk of raw material necessary to produce a ton of pig iron has been noted, but this has been more than offset, so far as costs of operation are concerned, by improvements in the machinery used for handling large quantities of ore. coal limestone, and slag. The mechanization of coal and iron-ore mining. the building of big ore boats and limestone carriers, of ore docks for fast loading and unloading, and the general use of heavy railroad equipment have all contributed to greatly reducing the number of man- hours required to mine, transport, and manufacture the raw materials into a ton of pig iron. This looks like a big saving and it is. If it were not for these big labor saving machines it would be impossible to produce the tonnage of iron and steel that is made each year in this country. On the other hand, the total capital investment necessary to bring down the man-hours per ton of pig iron to a 2.3 hours average at the blast furnace and to a total of only 12 man-hours from ore to metal (see Table 1) is so great that even the present high price of pig iron is probably not far above the true cost of manufacture when all the fixed charges are properly included.
Citation

APA: Ralph H. Sweetser  (1939)  Too Much Wasteful Bulk in the Raw Materials for the Iron Blast Furnace

MLA: Ralph H. Sweetser Too Much Wasteful Bulk in the Raw Materials for the Iron Blast Furnace. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1939.

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