A short history of the development of tapping equipment

The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
A. Dienenthal
Organization:
The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
14
File Size:
10293 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2014

Abstract

"The casthouse floor has always been one of the most dangerous working places on a blast furnace or a ferro-alloy/nonferrous furnace. Apart from working in an atmosphere including toxic gases, fumes, and dust, the workers have to perform hard and heavy manual work close to runners and ladles filled with hot liquid metal and slag.Before the invention and installation of tapping equipment the tap-holes were opened and closed manually. Opening was done by means of steel bars and sledgehammers, whereas the tap-hole was closed by repeatedly ramming small amounts of clay or refractory material into the tap-hole, again with the help of long, heavy bars. In addition, on blast furnaces the blast had to be stopped, since it was impossible to close the tap-hole properly against the blast furnace pressure. This stoppage of the blast resulted in regular losses of production. Around 1900 a major change in technology occurred. Samuel W. Vaughen, superintendent of the blast furnace department of the Cambria Iron company at Johnstown, Pennsylvania (USA), invented the first clay gun in 1895 (Wiley, 1896) (Figure 1)."
Citation

APA: A. Dienenthal  (2014)  A short history of the development of tapping equipment

MLA: A. Dienenthal A short history of the development of tapping equipment. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2014.

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