Wartime Accomplishments of Our Metal Industry ? Production and Substitution Problems Successfully Solved Through Co-operation

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Clyde Williams
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
3
File Size:
955 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1945

Abstract

IN this war as in no former one, the use of metals has been the major factor governing success. For building new plants, new transport facilities whether by land, sea, or air, for our mechanized army, and for nearly all weapons, iron and steel has provided the basic material. Being the world leader in iron and steel production in peacetime, we soon adapted plants to production for war. Starting with a production of 66,000,000 tons of steel ingots in 1940 from a rated capacity of 80,000,000 tons which only could be reached by straining every productive device available, our industry expanded to 86,000,000 tons in 1942, and ultimately to 96,000,000 tons. To do so required expansion of every unit operation including mining, rail and water transportation, blast-furnace and steelmaking facilities, and rolling mills. New plants not only had to be built in record time but more output for each operation was essential. This performance required skillful operation and engineering techniques and also a better understanding of the physics and chemistry underlying such complex operations as the working of a big blast furnace. A vastly increased pig iron production made possible the great output of steel by an industry that had depended on scrap for its basic raw material even though sufficient scrap was unavailable. This was done by conversion of pig iron in the Bessemer either into steel or into a low-carbon product that was subsequently used in place of scrap in the open¬hearth steel furnace. Furthermore, by duplexing from the open-hearth to the electric furnace, and the construction of many new electric furnaces, our output of electric-furnace alloy steel was greatly increased. Moreover, techniques were developed by which alloy steel could be made in the open hearth with the result that our production of alloy steel reached the fantastic figure of 15,000,000 tons a year.
Citation

APA: Clyde Williams  (1945)  Wartime Accomplishments of Our Metal Industry ? Production and Substitution Problems Successfully Solved Through Co-operation

MLA: Clyde Williams Wartime Accomplishments of Our Metal Industry ? Production and Substitution Problems Successfully Solved Through Co-operation. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1945.

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