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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Activity in Indiana in 1944
By Otis W. Freeman
Production of oil in Indiana during 1944 is estimated at approximately 4,950,000 bbl., a decline of 6 per cent from the preceding year. Shortage of labor and material, together with governmental regul
Jan 1, 1945
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in New Mexico in 1944
By John M. Kelly
New Mexico produced 39,475,388 bbl. of oil in 1944, the greatest amount in one year in the oil history of the state. This production was 593,046 bbl. or 1.25 per cent more than in 1943. New Mexico ret
Jan 1, 1945
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Symposia - Symposium on Creep of Nonferrous Metals and Alloys - Creep Properties of Some Rolled Lead-antimony Alloys
By H. E. Howe, A. A. Smith
The creep properties of lead alloys have been studied by a number of investigators but most of the work has been done on extruded material and the amount of data available on rolled alloys is surprisi
Jan 1, 1945
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Conference on Production and Design Limitation and Possibilities for Powder Metallurgy (Metal Technology, January 1945) - Pole Pieces for Electric Motors Made from Iron Powder - Discussion
By F. V. Lenel
R. P. Seelig.*—Dr. Lenel is to be congratulated on his presentation of a particularly interesting paper describing the use of the powder metallurgy process for the production of magnetic pole pieces.
Jan 1, 1945
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Production - Domestic - A Summary of Shutdown Orders and Proration in Texas for the Year 1944
By R. B. Gilmore
It has been the custom of the Railroad Commission of Texas to hold hearings each month with respect to existence and imminence of waste of oil and gas in Texas and its prevention, and to issue orders
Jan 1, 1945
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Combination Process For Alumina
By Junius D. Edwards
WHEN Charles Martin Hall invented the electrolytic process for the production of aluminum, one basic requirement was a supply of pure alumina. Now, more than 50 years later, the same requirement still
Jan 1, 1945
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The Plant Of The Dow Magnesium Corporation At Velasco, Texas
By C. M. Shigley
Tan record of the largest magnesium plant in the country utilizing sea water as a primary raw material stands as another victory in the struggle for large-scale production of pure chemical elements fr
Jan 1, 1945
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Discussion – Supplement To Technical Publications No. 1782 - Symposium On Cohesive Strength – Class C, Iron Steel Division, No. 372; Class E, Institute Of Metals Division, No.449 - Bridgman, P. W.
P. W. BRIDGMAN.-Owing to a misunderstanding, I did not see Dr. McAdam's and Dr. MacGregor's remarks on my paper on Flow and Fracture (Metals Technology, December 1944, Pp. 32-38), until afte
Jan 1, 1945
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Metallurgical Factors Of Underbead Cracking
By C. E. Sims, H. M. Banta, S. L. Hoyt
OVER the past few years, metallic arc welding has been extended to steels of the hardenable type. As compared with other methods of fabrication, production has been facilitated, service performance fr
Jan 1, 1945
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Quartz Crystal As A Mineral Resource
By Robert B. McCormick
WORLD WAR II has developed a use for the nonmetal mineral quartz crystal that was unknown in World War I. During the interim period of peace, experimental work in the radio field with the piezoelectri
Jan 1, 1945
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Production - Foreign - Petroleum Production in Mexico during 1943 and 1944
By J. M. de la Garza Cardenas
Mexico's total oil production in 1943 amounted to 35,149,843 bbl. and in 1944 to 38,196,818 bbl., both being substantially larger than in 1942, when production was only 34,71j1547 bbl. Daily aver
Jan 1, 1945
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Physical Metallurgy - Fundamental Principles Involved in Segregation in Alloy Castings (Metals
By R. M. Brick
Segregation can occur only in cast alloys that solidify over a range of temperatures with a difference in composition of liquid and solid phases within this range (ignoring monotectic systems and chem
Jan 1, 1945
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Magnesium Alloys - Oxidation Inhibitors in Core-sand Mixtures for Magnesium Castings
By O. Jay Myers
The war effort has furnished the necessary impetus for better magnesium foundry practice. Four or five years ago, there were but a few formulas in general use for core-sand mixtures for magnesium cast
Jan 1, 1945
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Considerations Of Mill Liners
By Warren L. Howes
LITERALLY hundreds of designs of mill liners are in use in current grinding operations, varying in contour from smooth to the roughest of surfaces, and in materials from scrap rail to alloy steels. A
Jan 1, 1945
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Contents of 1945 Iron and Steel Volume
Jan 1, 1945
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Opening Remarks
By C. S. Cole
CO-CHAIRMAN CARTER S. Cole l-The stimulus of war definitely increases interest in the subject we are discussing at this Symposium. There have been, in the past, other symposia on this subject and ther
Jan 1, 1945
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Three Roofing-Granule Plants In Pennsylvania
By Richard M. Foose
MOST of the roofing granules produced in Pennsylvania are made by two companies at three plants. The Advance Industrial Supply Co. has three quarries and a mill at Gladhill Station, in southern Adams
Jan 1, 1945
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A Case of Season Cracking in Low Karat Gold ? with Discussion on Low Karat Gold
By J. L. Christie
A recent case of failure of a-low karat gold alloy by stress-corrosion cracking is of interest because it illustrates a principle frequently overlooked: the relation between high residual stress and h
Jan 1, 1945
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Transportation Of Suspended Solids In Pipe Lines
By Warren E. Wilson
THE transportation of solids in pipe lines is a matter of deep concern in many fields of engineering. Much experimental and theoretical work has been done in an effort to devise means of designing pip
Jan 1, 1945
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Recrystallization Of Aluminum In Terms Of The Rate Of Nucleation And The Rate Of Growth
By W. A. Anderson, R. F. Mehl
RECRYSTALLIZATION of cold-worked metals has long been known to proceed by a process of nucleation and growth.1 When a cold-worked metal is heated to a temperature at which recrystallization will ensue
Jan 1, 1945