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  • AIME
    Notes On The Disadvantages Of Chrome Brick In Copper Reverberatory Furnaces (4864cf92-69f5-4af6-8342-660ee1c73f85)

    THE CHAIRMAN (G. H. CLEVENGER, Stanford University, Cal.).¬I would like to ask Mr. Pyne if he has had any experience inn the use of chromite as refractory under conditions that are highly reducing? I

    Jan 4, 1918

  • AIME
    Notes On The Disadvantages Of Chrome Brick In Copper Reverberatory Furnaces (9d591410-c5aa-47b2-b302-d981b50f75e4)

    H. 0. HOFMAN, Boston, Mass (written discussion*).-The paper by Mr.. Pyne gives clear evidence of the difficulties the metallurgist is likely to encounter when he tries to recover in the blast furnace

    Jan 3, 1918

  • AIME
    Notes On The Electrolytic Refining Of Copper Precipitate Anodes.

    By W. F. Burns

    (Butte Meeting, August, 1913.) ATTEMPTS were made in 1908, at the Great Falls Works, to produce ingots direct from the Butte precipitate by smelting the material in a reverberatory refining furnace.

    Jan 7, 1913

  • AIME
    Notes On The Electrolytic Refining Of Copper Precipitate Anodes. (dd6dc84e-9a22-400e-b0a6-f932db07baa2)

    By W. F. Burns

    (Butte Meeting, August, 1913.) ATTEMPTS were made in 1908, at the Great Falls Works, to produce ingots direct from the Butte precipitate by smelting- the material in a reverberatory refining furnace.

    Jan 7, 1913

  • AIME
    Notes on the Fatigue of Non-ferrous Metals

    By H. F. Moore

    DURING the last six years, there have been many extensive investigations of the fatigue of metals. The major work of 'these investigations has been the determination of constants for fatigue stre

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Notes On The Formation Of Ferrites In Roasting Blende.

    By G. S. Brooks

    (New York Meeting, February, 1913.) THE tendency of the oxides of such metals as aluminum, zinc, chromium, and calcium to form compounds at high temperatures with iron oxide is well established by pa

    Jan 5, 1913

  • AIME
    Notes on the Gayley Dry-Air Blast-Process

    By C. A. Meissner

    THE following is a further discussion of the paper of James Gayley, " The Application of Dry-Air Blast to the Manufacture of Iron " (Trans., xxxv., 746), with special reference to his sup-plementary p

    May 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Notes on the Genesis of Grecian Magnesite

    By J. R. Thoenen

    THE consensus of opinion in the published literature on. Grecian magnesite is that it has been formed by alteration of the serpentine, which in turn was itself a product, of metamorphism from the orig

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Notes On The Geology Of East Tintic

    By G. W. Crane

    WHEN ore was discovered on the Tintic Standard property in the spring of 1916, new developments were immediately started both north and south of that property, on the supposition that in East Tintic t

    Jan 9, 1925

  • AIME
    Notes on the Geology of the Potash Deposits of Germany, France, and Spain

    By J. P. Smith

    Permian salt measures carry extensive lenses of soluble potash salts in north central Germany. Potash deposits of Oligocene age are found in the Upper Rhine Graben of Alsace (France), and in the Catal

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Notes On The Great Falls Electrolytic Plant.

    By Willis Burns

    I. INTRODUCTION. These notes are submitted, not as a discussion of the modern practice of electrolytic-copper refining, but as the record of a refinery that was among the pioneers in the field and th

    Jan 8, 1913

  • AIME
    Notes On The Great Falls Electrolytic Plant. (9227427a-1325-409e-b082-16ff97495659)

    Discussion of the paper of Willis T. Burns, presented at the Butte meeting, August, 1913, and printed in Bulletin No. 80, August, 1913, pp. 2011 to 2049. PROF. JOSEPH W. RICHARDS, South Bethlehem, Pa

    Jan 11, 1913

  • AIME
    Notes on the Hard-Splint Coal of the Kanawha Valley

    By Stuart M. Buck

    THE term "splint" seems to have been adopted to describe the fracture of the hard bituminous coals of West Virginia. It is not a scientific name,, but rather a trade term, and does not indicate a corr

    Jan 1, 1882

  • AIME
    Notes On The Hardness Of Heat-Treated Aluminum Bronze

    By George Comstock

    Results are given of scleroscope and Brinell tests on specimens of cast 10-per cent. aluminum bronze, quenched and reheated at various low temperatures. The scleroscope was not found as reliable as th

    Jan 7, 1924

  • AIME
    Notes On The Heat Treatment Of High-Speed Steel Tools

    By A. E. Bellis

    The problem of heat treating high-speed steel becomes more and more important as the design of cutters becomes more and more complicated in increasing the efficiency of mechanical operations. Hundreds

    Jan 1, 1917

  • AIME
    Notes on the Heat Treatment of High-Speed Steel Tools (0bd4ba66-f13b-42e7-9997-22fb1d86722d)

    HENRY M. HOWE, Bedford Hills, N. T. (communication to the Secretary?).-The authors valuable results as to the effects of the air-hardening temperature on high-speed steel may be summed up thus: Influ

    Jan 6, 1917

  • AIME
    Notes on the Heat Treatment of High-Speed Steel Tools (e8704506-465e-4960-9a6d-bcfeb5953c2f)

    By A. E. Bellis

    ROBERT J. ANDERSON, Cleveland, Ohio (communication to the Secretary *).-The paper by Messrs. Bellis and Hardy was interesting to me and has led me to make a few remarks concerning some of the points b

    Jan 3, 1917

  • AIME
    Notes on the Heat Treatment of High-Speed Steel Tools (f0ee4c52-0eb9-43fe-9d11-456246b0ab87)

    By A. E. Bellis

    THE CHAIRMAN (ALBERT SAUVEUR, Cambridge, Mass.).-Any information likely to throw light on the constitution and proper treatment of high-speed steel in order to obtain maximum results, should surely he

    Jan 4, 1917

  • AIME
    Notes on the History of Porcupine

    By Louis Huntoon

    HISTORY of the Porcupine area has been pub-lished in detail by the Ontario Bureau. of Mines in several issues of its annual reports. An. interesting volume could be written on: this topic; especially

    Jan 8, 1923

  • AIME
    Notes On The History, Manufacture And Properties Of Wrought Brass

    By Wm. Reuben Webster

    BRASS is an alloy of copper and zinc. The brasses (using this term to denote all useful proportions of the two constituents) are the most valuable and widely employed of all [ ] nonferrous alloys, b

    Jan 1, 1942