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  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - Improvements in Coal-washing, Elevating and Conveying Machinery

    By S. Stutz

    Three years ago, at the Philadelphia meeting, in February, 1881, the author had the pleasure of presenting to the Institute a paper on coal-washing machinery.* Since that time many new machines, with

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - Improvements in Methods for Physical Tests

    By Arthur V. Abbott

    TO rightly use materials, two kinds of knowledge are essential: first, the actual strength of the substance; and secondly, the forces to which, in the structure, it may be subjected. Nearly all of the

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - Note Concerning a Grade of Iron Made from Carbonate Ole

    By Edward Gridley

    At the meeting of the Institute, held at Roanoke, Va., in June, 1883, I gave some facts in relation to charcoal pig iron of unusual strength, made from our carbonate ore taken from the mine at Amenia,

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - Note Concerning Certain Incrustations on Pig-iron

    By Frank Firmstone, Kenneth Robertson

    Peculiar crusts having appeared on certain irons made at Glendon and Pequest, which, in our experience, were entirely new, some analyses of them were made; and these analyses, together with an account

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - Note on Iron-ore Deposits in Pitkin County, Colorado

    By W. B. Devereux

    I have observed three deposits of iron ore in Pitkin County, which present unusnal characteristics, and wliich seem to throw some light upon the genesis of iron ores under certain conditions. They occ

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - Note on some Highly Phosphuretted Pig-irons

    By N. W. Lord

    There hare been made at one or two places in Ohio, during the last year or two, some irons of rather unusual phosphorus-percentages. The first of these which I had occasion to examine came from Mox

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - Note on the Determination of Phosphorus in Iron

    By Frank Julian

    After the solution of an iron ore, or metallic iron, in an acid, for the determination of phosphorus, it is necessary to evaporate the solution to dryness and to heat the residue to effect the complet

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - Note on the Presence of Lithia in Ohio Fire-clays

    By N. W. Lord

    Having recently had occasion to make a series of analyses of fire-clays for the present Ohio Geological Survey, I found that the amounts of potash and soda determined indirectly by measuring the chlor

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - Physical and Chemical Tests of Steel for Boiler and Ship-plate for the United States Government Cruisers

    By Pedro G. Salom

    I HAVE had an opportonity, within the last few months, of making a large number of physical and chemical tests of steel for boiler and ship-plate, which has been, and is now being, used principally fo

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - Sulphur Determination in Steel

    By Magnus Troilius

    The method of using the bromine process of determining sulphur in steel, described below, is in successful use at the Midvale Steel Works. Ten grams of drillings are weighed out and put into the 1/

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - Tables for Facilitating the Heat Calculations of Furnace-gases containing CO2, CO, CH4, H, and N.

    By Magnus Troilius

    The heat-calculations of gas-analyses involve cumbrous multiplications, which are apt to lead into errors. The foliowing tables and formulae have been found useful as facilitating such calculations, a

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - Tamping Drill-holes with Plaster of Paris

    By Frank Firmstone

    IN the summer of 1881 we were forced to break up and remove the large mass of iron which had accumulated under No. 2 furnace at Glendon, in order to prepare the foundations of the new furnace which ha

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - The Beneficial Fund of the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company

    By J. S. Harris

    AS a result of the study of social problems to which so much thought has been given in this country and Europe in the last half century, many employers of labor have come to think that some provision

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - The Distribution of Steam in Cities

    By W. P. Shinn

    In a paper contributed by W. A. Goodyear, M.E., on "Water Gas as Fuel," read at the Boston Meeting, February, 1883,* the following statenlent was made: "The latest experiments on a scale of some ma

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - The Iridium Industry

    By W. L. Dudley

    It is my desire to call attention to a new industry which was started about four years ago, through the discovery by Mr. John Holland, a resident of this city, of the methods employed in working the m

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - The Law of the Apex. Appendix

    By R. W. Raymond

    Since the foregoing paper (see p. 387) was printed, I have received the decision of Judge William E. Church, of the first District Court of Dakotah, in the case of Michael Duggan et al. v. John H. and

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - The Pyrites Deposits of Louisa County, Virginia

    By W. H. Adams

    Virginia, a store-house of metals, is more and more a surprise to the present generation. With her enormous available mineral wealth, worked upon steadily for over a century, exploited SUEciently to d

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - The Quemahoning Coal-field of Somerset County, Pennsylvania

    By J. P. Kimball

    INCIDENTAL to a description of the hytlrographical basin of the Quemahoning in Somerset county, Pa., as a coal-field, I have, without a personal survey of the whole county, taken the pains to collate

    Jan 1, 1884

  • AIME
    Cincinnati Paper - The Torsion-balance

    By A. Springer

    Chemists, physicists and others, whose occupations necessitate the use of fine scales, have heretofore regretted their inability to obtain any which would remain uniformly accurate. The difference

    Jan 1, 1884