Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
New York Meeting - February, 1924Jan 1, 1924
-
New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - Aluminum-SteelBy 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
-
New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - Massicks & Crooke's American Patent Fire-Brick Hot-Blast StovesBy 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
-
New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - Notes on the Bessemer ProcessBy 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
-
New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - On Welding by ElectricityBy 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
-
New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - The Development of American Blast-Furnaces, with Special Reference to Large YieldsBy James Gayley
The development of blast-furnace practice in America in the direction of large yields is mainly the history of our working since the year 1880, as the advancement that has been made in the last decade
Jan 1, 1891
-
-
-
New York Paper - 069-44 Hardness and Heat Treatment of Mining Drill Steel Shanks (with Discussion)By Charles Y. Clayton
The shank, to give good service, should not upset nor should it cause excessive wear on the various parts of the machine. To fulfill these requirements, the steel must have a certain hardness—that is,
Jan 1, 1923
-
New York Paper - 069-44 Hardness and Heat Treatment of Mining Drill Steel Shanks (with Discussion)By Charles Y. Clayton
The shank, to give good service, should not upset nor should it cause excessive wear on the various parts of the machine. To fulfill these requirements, the steel must have a certain hardness—that is,
Jan 1, 1923
-
New York Paper - A Chart for Use in Connection with Wet and Dry Bulb Thermometers in Making Psychrometric DeterminationsBy Clarence P. Linville
In an article published in the Iron Trade Review,' I gave a convenient arrangement for the installation of wet and dry bulb thermometers for use in making moisture determinations in the air being
Jan 1, 1914
-
New York Paper - A Laboratory Study of the Stages in the Refining of Copper (Discussion, p. 984)By R. B. Yerxa, C. F. Green, H. O. Hofman
MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, In refining copper, the metal is melted down in a reverbera tory furnace in a more or less oxidizing atmosphere and then further subjected to an oxidizing
Jan 1, 1904
-
New York Paper - A New Electric Miners’ LampBy David B. Rushmore
Torches were used by the early Romans for mine-lighting, and these were followed by open lamps or earthen jars filled with tallow or oil, and later by candles. In early coal-mining, explosive gases se
Jan 1, 1913
-
New York Paper - A New Method of Sinking ShaftsBy Eckley B. Coxe
I DES~RE to call the attention of the Institute to two deep vertical shafts, which are now being sunk in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, about miles north of Pottsville. These shafts are of interest
-
New York Paper - A New System for Operating Regenerative Hot-Blast StovesBy Jacob T. Wainwright
AS a means for increasing the efficiency in modern blast-furnaces by supplying to them blast of a much higher temperature than is now possible, the writer offers as a suggestion a modification in the
Jan 1, 1889
-
New York Paper - A One-ton Acid Open Hearth and Some Experimental Results (with Discussion)By C. E. Meissner
The need for a practical method of deciding upon new alloy steel analyses to widen its markets was the problem facing the Chrome Steel Works at the beginning of 1927. In addition to determining the ph
-
New York Paper - A Peculiar Type of Intercrystalline Brittleness of Copper (with Discussion)By S. C. Langdon, Henry S. Rawdon
The following note describing the behavior of copper under rather unusual conditions is offered for its suggestiveness rather than as a complete study of the question. The examinations described were
Jan 1, 1921
-
New York Paper - A Problem in Mining, together With Some Data on Tunnel-Driving (with Discussion)By F. M. Simonds, E. Z. Burns
The Rawley property is located in the Kerber Creek mining-district, Saguache county, Colorado, at an elevation of 10,600 ft. (See sketch-map, Fig. 1.) Ore was found in this vicinity as early as 1880,
Jan 1, 1914
-
New York Paper - A Prospectors' Density-RuleBy J. Holms Pollok
The determination of specific gravity dates from such antiquity, and the various published methods of determining it are so numerous, that one may well be skeptical as to the value of a new means of o
Jan 1, 1900
-
New York Paper - A Review of the Iron-Mining Industry of New York for the past DecadeBy John C. Smock
The ten years, 1879 to 1888, inclusive, have been notable in the history of iron-making for the great rise during the latter part of 1879 and the earlier half of 1880; for the maximum of production in
Jan 1, 1889