IC 6930 Consumption Of Primary And Secondary Tin In The United States In 1935 ? Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
E. W. Pehrson
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
14
File Size:
4387 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1936

Abstract

In making any canvass of secondary metals great care must be exercised to avoid duplication or exaggeration of net consumption. One of the major difficulties is to trace the metal accurately as it passes through the many cycles of manufacture. Greater or less duplication probably occurs in any canvass. The manufacturer of tin plate, for instance, purchases primary pig tin exclusively as a raw material. Most of it goes into the coating on the steel sheet, but a substantial part emerges in the form of byproducts such as scruffs and drosses. These are sold to other plants, where they are used in the manufacture of alloys and chemicals. Alloys and chemicals, however, are not necessarily articles for final consumption. The alloy may be sold in ingot form to a bearing manufacturer, who, in turn may produce some scrap, which he may sell to still' another plant that may make still other products. There is a considerable return of tin in the form of waste products from chemicals sold to the silk industry. Even tin plate does not represent an ultimate use of tin because the tin-can maker produces large amounts of clippings, which are sold to detinning plants, where the tin is recovered and used again for some other purpose. Thus the degree of duplication in consumption statistics depends on the point in the industrial cycle where consumption is measured.
Citation

APA: E. W. Pehrson  (1936)  IC 6930 Consumption Of Primary And Secondary Tin In The United States In 1935 ? Introduction

MLA: E. W. Pehrson IC 6930 Consumption Of Primary And Secondary Tin In The United States In 1935 ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1936.

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