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    New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - Aluminum-Steel

    By R. A. Hadfield

    It seems a specially fitting opportunity to present a paper on the alloys of iron and aluminum at the New York meeting of this Institute, owing to the fact that America has, more than any other countr

    Jan 1, 1891

  • AIME
    New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - Fuel-Gas and Some of its Applications

    By Burdett Loomis

    The advantages of gaseous fuel have been too fully set forth during the past few years to need recapitulation. Papers, arguments, and editorials have been issued, in a more or less general way, that w

    Jan 1, 1891

  • AIME
    New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - Massicks & Crooke's American Patent Fire-Brick Hot-Blast Stoves

    By Walter Crooke

    Regenerative hot-blast stoves are now in general use in all parts of the world, and are so well understood and appreciated, that I need not take up your time with an account of their history and intro

    Jan 1, 1891

  • AIME
    New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - Notes on the Bessemer Process

    By Henry M. Howe

    The striking features of American Bessemer practice aré its large output and its low initial silicon and initial temperature. These are interdependent. Large outputs implies short blows and short inte

    Jan 1, 1891

  • AIME
    New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - On Welding by Electricity

    By Elihu Thompson

    The subject of welding by electricity has been so recently and so ably treated by Sir Frederick Brsmwell before the Institution of Civil Engineers* as to render evidently superfluous there-statement o

    Jan 1, 1891

  • AIME
    New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - Spirally-Welded Steel Tubes

    By James C. Bayles

    The ideal pressure-tube is obviously the one which combines the greatest strength with the least weight of material consistent with the uses for which it is designed or employed. The inside of the pip

    Jan 1, 1891