Bulletin 33 Comparative Test of Run of Mine and Briquetted coal on the Torpedo Boad Biddle

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 50
- File Size:
- 1451 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1911
Abstract
General statement.-The briquetting tests conducted by the technologic
branch of the United States Geological Survey had their
beginning in the testing of coals and lignites at the Louisiana Purchase
Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., in 1904. Briquetting tests were
made at the fuel-testing plants at St. Louis, Mo., and at Norfolk,
Va. Similar tests to be made at the experiment station of the
Bureau of Mines at Pittsburg, Pa., form an essential part of investigations
looking to the determination of the fuel value of the coals
and lignites belonging to or for the use of the United States.
The tests have comprised (1) the manufacture of briquets to determine
the adaptability of different coals and lignites to the process and
the merits of different binding materials; (2) physical tests to establish
the fitness of the briquets to withstand weathering, transportation,
and handling; and (3) steaming tests to prove the calorific value
of the briquets in boilers of different types used by the Government,
and, by comparison with the raw coals, the benefits to be derived
from briquetting.
Details of the tests have been issued in other publications. list
of Government publications on fuel testing and briquetting is given
at the close of this volume.
Tests at Norfolk.-The fuel tests conducted at Norfolk included a
detailed investigation of a number of Virginia and West Virginia
coals that are bought by the United States Government for the Navy
and for use in constructing the Panama Canal, and are extensively
used by the merchant marine, manufacturing plants, and railroads.
Through a cooperative arrangement with the Navy Department
steaming tests of the coals were undertaken to determine the relative
merits of the same coal when burned raw or as briquets in marine
boilers.
Preliminary arrangements were made between Joseph A. Holmes,
then expert in charge of the technologic branch of the United States Geological Survey and now director of the Bureau of Mines, and
Rear-Admiral Charles W. Rae, Chief Engineer of the United States
Navy. The tests were made on board the U. S. torpedo boat Biddle,
designated for the purpose, beginning December 6, 1907, and ending
January 27, 1908.
The coal used in these tests came from the Sewell and Beckley
beds in the New River district of West Virginia. With the particular
equipment used in the tests both coal and briquets were far. from
smokeless; consequently the data of this bulletin are applicable only
by analogy to parallel operation with a coal more nearly smokeless,
but nevertheless applicable with much reliability. The possibilities
of coals of different composition are indicated by the data to be
published in a bulletin of the Bureau of Mines, wherein the present
authors describe a number of tests in which only a very slight
amount of smoke was emitted while burning raw coal from the
Pocahontas No.3 bed, West Virginia, and briquets made therefrom
at rates of combustion very much higher than any rates used in the
torpedo-boat boiler. At a combustion rate of 120 pounds of the
Pocahontas briquets per square foot of grate surface there was
scarcely any smoke.
It was the original intention to make a set of preliminary steaming
tests alongside a dock (which tests furnish material for this bulletin)
and to finish with a set of running tests at sea; but the running tests
were never made, for lack of time and men.
Citation
APA:
(1911) Bulletin 33 Comparative Test of Run of Mine and Briquetted coal on the Torpedo Boad BiddleMLA: Bulletin 33 Comparative Test of Run of Mine and Briquetted coal on the Torpedo Boad Biddle. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1911.