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  • AIME
    Notes on the Case-Hardening of Special Steels.

    By ROBERT R. ABUOTT

    Discussion of the paper of Prof. Albert Sauveur and, G. A. Reinhardt, presented at the Cleveland meeting, October, 1912, and printed in Bulletin No. 71, November, 1912, pp. 1335 to 1341. ROBERT R. AB

    Dec 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Notes On The Disadvantages Of Chrome Brick In Copper Reverberatory Furnaces

    By Francis Pyne

    THE following notes are presented in an endeavour to point out the disadvantages attending the use of chrome brick in reverberatory furnaces used in the treatment of materials that are too valuable to

    Jan 12, 1917

  • AIME
    Notes On The Disadvantages Of Chrome Brick In Copper Reverberatory Furnaces (4864cf92-69f5-4af6-8342-660ee1c73f85)

    THE CHAIRMAN (G. H. CLEVENGER, Stanford University, Cal.).¬I would like to ask Mr. Pyne if he has had any experience inn the use of chromite as refractory under conditions that are highly reducing? I

    Jan 4, 1918

  • SME
    Notes On The Efficacy Of Wet Versus Dry Screening Of Fly Ash

    By B. Valentim

    The methodology used to obtain fly ash subsamples of different sizes is generally based on wet or dry sieving methods. However, the worth of such methods is not certain if the methodology applied is n

    Jan 1, 2008

  • AUSIMM
    Notes on the Estimation of Tungsten in Ores

    THE following notes simply sum up the writer's experience, which extended over a very busy period of some three years, dealing with wolfram ores and concentrates. The three methods for the estima

    Jan 1, 1922

  • AUSIMM
    Notes on the Estimation of Zinc by Ferro-Cyanide in Acid Solutions

    THE alkaline method for the estimation of zinc cannot, in the writer's opinion, be relied. upon to within very narrow limits between two assayers on unknown quantities of zinc. The end point is n

    Jan 1, 1911

  • AIME
    Notes on the Fatigue of Non-ferrous Metals

    By H. F. Moore

    DURING the last six years, there have been many extensive investigations of the fatigue of metals. The major work of 'these investigations has been the determination of constants for fatigue stre

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Notes on the Gayley Dry-Air Blast-Process

    By C. A. Meissner

    THE following is a further discussion of the paper of James Gayley, " The Application of Dry-Air Blast to the Manufacture of Iron " (Trans., xxxv., 746), with special reference to his sup-plementary p

    May 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Notes On The Geology Of East Tintic

    By G. W. Crane

    WHEN ore was discovered on the Tintic Standard property in the spring of 1916, new developments were immediately started both north and south of that property, on the supposition that in East Tintic t

    Jan 9, 1925

  • AIME
    Notes On The Hardness Of Heat-Treated Aluminum Bronze

    By George Comstock

    Results are given of scleroscope and Brinell tests on specimens of cast 10-per cent. aluminum bronze, quenched and reheated at various low temperatures. The scleroscope was not found as reliable as th

    Jan 7, 1924

  • AIME
    Notes On The Heat Treatment Of High-Speed Steel Tools

    By A. E. Bellis

    The problem of heat treating high-speed steel becomes more and more important as the design of cutters becomes more and more complicated in increasing the efficiency of mechanical operations. Hundreds

    Jan 1, 1917

  • AIME
    Notes on the Heat Treatment of High-Speed Steel Tools (0bd4ba66-f13b-42e7-9997-22fb1d86722d)

    HENRY M. HOWE, Bedford Hills, N. T. (communication to the Secretary?).-The authors valuable results as to the effects of the air-hardening temperature on high-speed steel may be summed up thus: Influ

    Jan 6, 1917

  • AIME
    Notes on the Heat Treatment of High-Speed Steel Tools (e8704506-465e-4960-9a6d-bcfeb5953c2f)

    By A. E. Bellis

    ROBERT J. ANDERSON, Cleveland, Ohio (communication to the Secretary *).-The paper by Messrs. Bellis and Hardy was interesting to me and has led me to make a few remarks concerning some of the points b

    Jan 3, 1917

  • AIME
    Notes on the Heat Treatment of High-Speed Steel Tools (f0ee4c52-0eb9-43fe-9d11-456246b0ab87)

    By A. E. Bellis

    THE CHAIRMAN (ALBERT SAUVEUR, Cambridge, Mass.).-Any information likely to throw light on the constitution and proper treatment of high-speed steel in order to obtain maximum results, should surely he

    Jan 4, 1917

  • IOM3
    Notes on the history of the safety-lamp

    By Hardwick F. W., O'Shea L. T.

    The survey covers: coal-mine lighting prior to the invention of the safety-lamp, including candles, the flint-and-steel Spedding mill, and mirrors; the growth in knowledge of firedamp; the Society in

    Dec 1, 1916

  • AIME
    Notes On The History, Manufacture And Properties Of Wrought Brass

    By Wm. Reuben Webster

    BRASS is an alloy of copper and zinc. The brasses (using this term to denote all useful proportions of the two constituents) are the most valuable and widely employed of all [ ] nonferrous alloys, b

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Notes On The History, Manufacture And Properties Of Wrought Brass (d533d7c1-e00c-41ec-8b5b-7167049c5ffa)

    By Wm. Reuben Webster

    BRASS is an alloy of copper and zinc. The brasses (using this term to denote all useful proportions of the two constituents) are the most valuable and widely employed of all [ ] nonferrous alloys, b

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Notes On The Laramie Tunnel.

    By David W. Brunton

    (San Francisco Meeting, October, 1911.) MINE-DRAINAGE and the ever-increasing demand for water on the plains have within the past few years necessitated the driving of a great number of adits and tun

    Apr 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Notes On The Metallography Of Alloys.

    By William Campbell

    (Cleveland Meeting, October, 1912.) [SECRETARY'S NOTE.-To avoid repetitions of foot-notes, references to authorities are made in the paper by means of figures, referring to a numbered list in th

    Dec 1, 1912

  • CIM
    Notes on the Non-Metallic Minerals of the Lillooet District

    By C. E. Cartwright

    That the construction of the Pacific Great Eastern railway has not been accompanied by an immediate and great development of traffic is not due to lack of natural resources in the district traversed,

    Jan 1, 1925