Buffalo Paper - Note on Cast-Steel Water-Jackets

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Richard H. Terhune
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
1
File Size:
45 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1889

Abstract

The use of water-cooled breast-jackets or cinder-tap blocks is a great convenience in lead-smelting, even when siliceous slags are made. If the charges are at all basic it is almost imperative. Jackets of riveted wrought-iron or steel are expensive; those of cast-iron are liable to crack; those of bronze are costly and not durable, being easily penetrated by tapping-bars or destroyed by streams of matte impinging against them. To overcome these objections I introduced at the Hanauer works, in April, 1886, castjackets of steel, which have been in constant use since that time and are to-day as good as new. These jackets were made for us by the Chester Steel Castings Company, of Chester, Pa., at a cost of ten cents a pound at the works of that company. The metal is 5/8-inch thick, and the jackets were cored and tapped for l1/2-inch bushings, affording two large holes for the removal of dirt and incrustations. The same holes are used for feed- and discharge-water through 3/4-inch pipe. I hope the successful introduction here of cast-jackets of steel will lead to their more extended use in all branches of metallurgy where water-cooled surfaces are severely taxed, and where the size and thickness of the castings are not unfavorable to the production of a sound article, impervious to water and of high tensile strength.
Citation

APA: Richard H. Terhune  (1889)  Buffalo Paper - Note on Cast-Steel Water-Jackets

MLA: Richard H. Terhune Buffalo Paper - Note on Cast-Steel Water-Jackets. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1889.

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