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Skip System Simplifies Costly Problems of Elevating Ore From Open Pit Mines
By J. S. Seawright
Haulage is a costly feature in the operation of an open pit mine, whether it be iron, copper, or limestone. The National Iron Co. has adapted an old underground method to the open pit inclined skip ha
Jun 1, 1955
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Skips and Cages
"In the mines producing over 500 tons per day, skips have replaced the old method of hoisting ore by cars run onto cages. In the car and cage method, two men (station tenders) trammed the loaded cars
Jan 1, 1913
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Slag Control
THE slag performs two useful functions. in open-hearth steel-making. First, it is the means of disposal of all the impurities, save carbon, which are removed from the charge materials in refining the
Jan 1, 1951
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Slag Control (5416173d-57da-4efd-8088-6842981a769b)
THE slag performs two useful functions in open-hearth steel- making. First, it is the means of disposal of all the impurities, save carbon, which are removed from the charge materials in refining the
Jan 1, 1964
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Slag Control (792a1f1b-09c6-45fc-bb59-856cfd516ed6)
By C. H. Jr. Herty
ALMOST every metallurgist who has given the Howe Memorial Lecture has had a personal contact with the distinguished gentleman to whose honor this hour is devoted. Unfortunately for me, such personal c
Jan 1, 1940
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Slag Control By Introduction Of Flux Through Blast-Furnace Tuyeres
By Carl G. Hogberg
DURING recent months, the acute shortage of steel scrap has necessitated the use of higher percentages of hot metal in the open-hearth charge. With these higher percentages, the sulphur content of hot
Jan 1, 1943
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Slag Control In The Making Of Iron And Steel
AT the fall meeting of the Iron and Steel Division, Oct. 4, 1934, in New York, a symposium was held on Slag Control in the Making of Iron and Steel. The chairman was J. H. Nead and the vice chairman,
Jan 1, 1935
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Slag Control in the Making of Iron and Steel (4479ce07-d486-4fc0-985e-51feb7e7085f)
By Sweetser, Ralph A
AT the fall meeting of the Iron and Steel Division, Oct. 4, 1934, in New York, a symposium was held on Slag Control in the Making of Iron and Steel. The chairman was J. H. Nead and the vice chairman,
Jan 1, 1935
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Slag Fuming Process At The Cominco Smelter, Trail, British Columbia
By George A. Yurko
The Cominco smelter, located at Trail, British Columbia, Canada, produces 180 000 metric tons of lead bullion annually in conventional blast furnaces. The resulting slag from these furnaces, 210 000 m
Jan 1, 1970
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Slag Viscosity Tables For Blast-Furnace Work
By A. L. Field
Previous Publications THE first report on the slag viscosity work of the Bureau of Mines was made by one of the authors 1 in 1916. It was concerned chiefly with, the method of measurement. A paper 2
Jan 12, 1917
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Slag-Control Methods
IN A broad sense, the subject of slag control includes not only the adjustment of the composition of the slag but also of its relative weight in terms of percentage of the metal-bath weight. The slag
Jan 1, 1944
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Slag-metal Relationships in the Basic Open-hearth Furnace
By Karl Fetters
IN the process of making steel in the open-hearth furnace the refining of the metal during the working period of the heat is largely accomplished through the agency of the slag. From the birth of the
Jan 1, 1940
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Slag-Viscosity Tables For Blast Furnace Work ? Discussion
D. J. DEMOREST,* Washington, D. C. (written discussion ?).-This paper is a real contribution to technical science; it will make it' easier to think accurately about the inner workings of a blast
Jan 4, 1918
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Slate
By Oliver Bowles
Slate is a fine-grained rock that has a more or less perfect natural cleavage, permitting it to be split readily into thin, smooth sheets. According to a definition established by the American Society
Jan 1, 1960
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Slate (0c78d50b-1137-44a5-9bc9-058bbe4b787a)
By Charles H. Behre
SLATE (Thonschiefer, German; ardoise, French) is a rock, an aggregation of mineral grains, occurring in nature, which is used for roofing and other special purposes. It is finely granular and crystall
Jan 1, 1949
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Sliding Royalties For Oil And Gas Wells
By Roswell Johnson
THE principle of sliding or graduation in royalties is accomplished either by the block, period, cumulative, or class method. The block method calls for a very low royalty rate on all oil produced up
Jan 6, 1915
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Sliding Royalties For Oil And Gas Wells (e361b919-5284-4114-9b57-7b56671fc55b)
By Rosewell H. Johnson
Discussion of the paper of ROSWELL H. JOHNSON, presented it the San Francisco meeting, September, 1915, And printed in Bulletin No. 102, June, 1915, pp. 1291 to 1294. WILLIAM A. WILLIAMS, San. Franci
Jan 12, 1915
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Slim-Hole Drilling On The Gulf Coast
By I. W. Alcorn
THE cost of drilling in the past few years of proration and ever decreasing allowables has received increasing thought and study. It seems to parallel the strides made with respect to pumping problems
Jan 1, 1941
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Slime Agitation And Solution Replacement Methods At The West End Mill, Tonopah, Nev.
By Jay Carpenter
THIS paper deals with only one step in the treatment of ore at the West End mill; not because the other steps are repetitions of practice in other mills, but because in this particular step there is i
Jan 8, 1915
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Slime Recovery By Gravity Concentration - A Viable Alternative?
By R. O. Burt
The economics of recovering slimes by gravity concentration, except in a few highly specialized cases, was hampered by the lack of suit- able high capacity equipment. However, in the last decade i
Jan 1, 1980