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Static, Dynamic, And Notch Toughness - Discussion (c612d3d9-51d3-42d9-bc41-b1857ea54bbe)JOHN H . NELSON,*Worcester, Mass.-In reply to the question "Is there any final information in regard to the relation between the temperature or the rate of cooling of a piece of heat-treated steel f
Jan 6, 1919
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Magnesium Alloys - Water Quenching of Some Typical Magnesium Casting Alloys (With discussion)By R. E. Anderson, R. S. Busk
The mechanical properties of many nonferrous alloys can be modified by heat-treatment. This is almost always effected by controlling the amount of alloy in solid solution and the amount and distributi
Jan 1, 1945
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Employment Service -For Discharged Officers And Military MenA professional and special section of the United States Employment Service, Department of Labor, has been created for the purpose of aiding officers and men who have been discharged from military serv
Jan 2, 1919
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Earle C. Smith, Chairman, Iron and Steel Division, A.I.M.E.By AIME AIME
THE steel industry has always been noted for producing men of forceful and versatile personality, many of whom combine the practicality that results from wide experience with an excellent theoretical
Jan 1, 1942
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Production Engineering - Pumping Deep Wells in the Seminole Field, OklahomaBy M. J. Kirwan, K. A. Covell
This paper covers a brief discussion of pumping 38° to 41° gravity oil from Wilcox sand wells ranging in depths from 4000 to 4900 ft. in the Seminole field, Oklahoma. As recently as a year ago it w
Jan 1, 1929
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Metal Mining ? Abnormal Practice Followed to Obtain Maximum ProductionBy William J. Coulter
WITHIN the United States the problem of meeting maximum production by our metal mines has been solved by: (1) Conservation of man power by mechanization. (2) Increasing man-power efficiency as expre
Jan 1, 1945
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Industrial Minerals Treatment Methods - A Method for Estimating the Efficiency of Pulverizers (T. P. 810)By Raymond Wilson
Grinding costs are an important item in cement manufacture, and the cost of power is one of the large items in grinding costs. Even where power is of secondary importance, cost items dependent on mill
Jan 1, 1938
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Industrial Minerals Treatment Methods - A Method for Estimating the Efficiency of Pulverizers (T. P. 810)By Raymond Wilson
Grinding costs are an important item in cement manufacture, and the cost of power is one of the large items in grinding costs. Even where power is of secondary importance, cost items dependent on mill
Jan 1, 1938
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The Importance of Fine-Grinding in the Cyanide-Treatment of Gold- and Silver-OresBy FREDERICK C. BROWN
THE practice of fine-grinding is now being so successfully - carried on in some fields, notably in West Australia, and its advisability has been so frequently pointed out' that the matter in this
Jan 1, 1906
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San Francisco Paper - Electrolytic Refining at the U. S. Mint, San Francisco, Cal.By Edward B. Durham
The refinery at the San Francisco Mint takes the bullion purchased by the receiving department, and carrying Illore than 200 parts of precious metals in 1,000, or, in mint parlance, over 200 fine, and
Jan 1, 1912
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Role of Steel in Mineral SanctionsBy C. K. Leith
CERTAIN ideas on iron and steel sanctions to follow originated in a series of conferences held under the joint auspices of the War Department and Brookings Institute in Washington last spring. The vie
Jan 1, 1944
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Papers - Classification - Agglomerating and Agglutinating Tests for Classifying Weakly Caking Coals (With Discussion)By G. P. Connell, R. E. Gilmore, J. H. H. Nicolls
The purpose of this paper is to suggest a procedure for indicating the dividing line between noncaking coals and those that have weakly caking properties. A laboratory agglomerating test as an aid in
Jan 1, 1934
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Chuquicamata Sulphide Plant: Smelter StacksBy Clarence W. Dunham
BECAUSE of the earthquakes that occur at Chuquicamata, the design of the smelter stacks constituted the most difficult structural problem of the entire sulphide ore project. Slight tremors occur almos
Jan 1, 1952
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Personal. (e7a7e1e0-12bb-4e95-8151-9bc25a23c60d)(Members are urged to send in for this column any notes of interest concerning, themselves or their fellow-members.) Members and visitors who registered at institute headquarters during October A.
Jan 11, 1913
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Mine Ventilation - Economic Design of Mine AirwaysBy A. S. Richardson
The design of mine airways receives, in general, very little engineering treatment. To a large extent this is, of course, due to the fact that information upon which to base calculations is seldom ava
Jan 1, 1927
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Water Sealed Wind Boxes for Dwight and Lloyd Sintering MachineBy E. A. Has, E. Mcl. Tittmann
Double roasting of sinter carrying a high percentage of lead concentrates, gave rise to the problem of removing the sheets of metallic lead formed in the wind boxes. The solution of the problem has be
Jan 1, 1951
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Papers - Lead - Chlorine Dezincing in Lead RefiningBy Jesse O. Betterton
In the Parkes process of lead refining, after desilverization has been completed by means of zinc additions, there will remain in the lead from 0.5 to 0.6 per cent zinc. At this stage in the refining
Jan 1, 1937
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Occidental's In Situ Shale Oil Process Moves Closer to CommercializationBy Ta M. Li
Recent economic and environmental setbacks have not slowed Occidental Oil Shale, Inc.'s program aimed at the commercialization of oil shale. In fact, the firm expects to have a 795 MI (500C) bbl)
Jan 12, 1976
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Magnetite as a Standard Material for Measuring Grinding EfficiencyBy R. S. Dean
True careful work of Gross and Zimmerley1 has established the fact that the energy actually used in grinding is proportional to the new sur-face produced. This confirmation of Rittinger's law was
Jan 1, 1936
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Must the United States Have A Petroleum Shortage ? An Independent Producer Claims A Free Market Will Provide Crude Oil To Meet All DemandsBy Harold B. Fell
MANY oil producers are in disagreement with the idea held by some that an increase in the price of crude oil would be unlikely to stimulate much production and that we will be obliged to draw upon for
Jan 1, 1947