Brass-Furnace Practice In The United States. - Introduction.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
H. W. Gillett
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
299
File Size:
128028 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1916

Abstract

This bulletin is issued by the Bureau of Mines as a contribution to the increase of safety and efficiency in the preparation and utilization of the mineral resources in the United States. Notable among the drains on these resources are the demands made by the nonferrousmetal industries, and in these the losses occasioned in melting brass and bronze are worthy of particular attention. This statement will be better appreciated by a consideration of the size of the brass industry. MAGNITUDE OF THE BRASS INDUSTRY. According to the Thirteenth Census, in 1909 there were in the United States 1,021 fu-ms that dealt mainly in brass and bronze. This total included jobbing foundries, manufacturing plants that both cast and machine a brass or bronze product, and rolling mills, but did not include iron foundries having nonferrous departments nor the numerous large brass-foundry departments of manufacturing plants that produce the castings used in the manufacture of electrical apparatus, cash registers, pumps, and the thousands of machines that require brass castings for their construction. Penton's Foundry List for 1910 gives about 1,150 exclusively nonferrous foundries and about 2,300 iron or steel foundries that also melt brass. If the rolling mills and. jobbing foundries in manufacturing plants be included, and if due credit be given to the rapid growth of the industry in the last few years, largely through the stimulation of the automobile busi¬ness, it is probable that not less than 3,600 plants are to-day melting brass or bronze.
Citation

APA: H. W. Gillett  (1916)  Brass-Furnace Practice In The United States. - Introduction.

MLA: H. W. Gillett Brass-Furnace Practice In The United States. - Introduction.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1916.

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