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Steelmaking - Effect of Ingot Delivery Time as a Factor in Quality of Bessemer Steel (Metals Technology, August 1945) (With discussion)
By Howard C. Dunkle
Various factors can affect the quality of BIII2 and BIII3 steel as produced in a bessemer plant; among them: vessel-charging practice, blowing practice, ingot-pouring practice, ingot delivery-time pra
Jan 1, 1945
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Diffusion In R301 Alloy And Its Effect On The Corrosion Resistance
By L. F. Mondolfo
R301 is a clad aluminum alloy, composed of a core of a duralumin-type alloy clad with a magnesium silicide alloy. It differs from other well-known clad alloys in that the cladding and the core respond
Jan 1, 1945
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Machines For Nonmetallic Flotation
By James A. Barr
THE writer's first experience with flotation was during World War I, in the beneficiation of Alabama graphite schist ores. One plant used a cone with a peripheral overflow; dried ore was distrib
Jan 1, 1945
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Production Engineering and Research - An Analysis of Material-balance Calculations (T. P. 1780, Petr. Tech., Jan. 1945)
By Rex W. Woods, Morris Muskat
A leastmsquare analysis procedure has been developed and applied for the study of the deviations in estimations of oil in place as given by the material-balance equations. The data used were those obt
Jan 1, 1945
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Magnesium Alloys - Grain Size and Properties of Sand-cast Magnesium Alloys (Metals Technology, Feb. 1945) (With discussion)
By C. W. Phillips, R. S. Busk
With most cast metals the grain size may vary within wide limits, depending upon the conditions at the moment of freezing. These conditions are subject to control in magnesium-base alloys, by proper m
Jan 1, 1945
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The Coal-Pulverizing Plant At The McGill Smelter Of The Kennecott Copper Corporation
By Edward Pesout
THE McGill smelter started operations in the year 1907. The smelter furnaces were fired with run-of-mine coal on grates until April 1911, when oil firing was introduced. Oil firing continued until Apr
Jan 1, 1945
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Production - Foreign - Petroleum Developments in Canada, 1942 1944
By G. S. Hume
During the war years the drilling activity in Canada has been steadily increasing and still further increase is expected in 1945. The production of oil, which in the past has come largely from the Tur
Jan 1, 1945
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Symposia - Symposium on Creep of Nonferrous Metals and Alloys - Contents and Introduction
By Cleveland Meeting
Jan 1, 1945
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Copper and Copper-Rich Alloys - Textures, Anisotropy and Earing Behavior of Brass (Metals Technology, June 1945) (With discussion)
By F. H. Wilson, R. M. Brick
With the papers of Palmer and Smith1 and of Burghoff and Bohlen,2 published in 1942, understanding of the problem of the development of ears on deep-drawn brass cups was brought to the point where, fr
Jan 1, 1945
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Production - Domestic - Petroleum Production in Louisiana for 1944
By C. J. Bonnecarrere, P. A. Jr. Bloomer, J. Hunter
Since 1941 not more than 15 per cent of aii wildcat wells drilled in Louisiana have been successful. This figure is not too discouraging, especially in view of the fact that during the same period app
Jan 1, 1945
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Symposia - Symposium on Cohesive Strength (Metals Technology, December 1944) - The Technical Cohesive Strength of Metals in Terms of the Principal Stresses
By D. J. McAdam
As shown in three recent papers by the author, in two papers by McAdam and Mebs, and in a paper by McAdam, Mebs, and Geil," the technical cohesive strength of a metal, in any particular state as regar
Jan 1, 1945
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Transformation of Austenite - Time-temperature Relations in Tempering Steel (Metals Technology, September 1945) (With discussion)
By L. D. Jaffe, J. H. Hollomon
The effect of tempering temperature and time upon the properties of quenched steel is clearly a subject of great practical importance, as well as of considerable theoretical interest. It would be very
Jan 1, 1945
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Petroleum Economics - Postwar Inventories of Crude Oil and Petroleum Products in the United States (T. P. 1870, Petr. Tech., May 1945)
By Albert J. McIntosh
With petroleum consumption declining temporarily after V-J day, the oil industry is urged to use this period as a kind of stopgap to rebuild its war-depleted inventories and help cushion the effect of
Jan 1, 1945
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Corundum-A Vital Wartime Abrasive
By Roland D. Parks
CORUNDUM, little publicized as an industrial abrasive, has, in its small way, contributed greatly to the production of many specialized items vital to our war program and to our allies. Optical elemen
Jan 1, 1945
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Factors Influencing the Stress Cracking of Brass Cartridge Cases ? with Discussion on Brass Cartridge Cases
By George Sachs, S. M. Clark, George Espey
he tendency of a commercially drawn cartridge case to crack in the mercury test and the relation of cracking tendency to residual stress retained after drawing were studied. The fourth drawpiece (next
Jan 1, 1945
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Symposia - Symposium on Creep of Nonferrous Metals and Alloys - Creep Properties of Cold-drawn Annealed Monel and Inconel - Discussion
By B. B. Betty
H. L. Burghoff.*—Have the authors any information on the effect of grain size in these materials? There is a material difference in the grain sizes shown for the Monel and the Inconel. Is a wide range
Jan 1, 1945
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Standards For Identifying Complex Twin Relationships In Cubic Crystals
By C. G. Dunn
IDENTIFICATION Of the kinds of orientation relationships that may exist among crystals is an important problem in the metallurgical field. As an aid to its solution standard orientations of several or
Jan 1, 1945
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Foreword By E. E. Schumacher
Jan 1, 1945
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Production- Domestic - Oil and Gas Developments in New York in 1944
By C. A. Hartnagel
During- the past 10 years the annual production of petroleum in New York has averaged close to 5,000,000 bbl., the total for the period being 49,881,000 bbl. In 6 of the 10 years, the production was s
Jan 1, 1945