Harrisburg Pa. Paper - Chemical Methods for Analyzing Rail-Steel

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 45
- File Size:
- 2340 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1882
Abstract
SINCE the discussion on steel rails in America has forcibly drawn attention to the value of chemical analysis, if not as a necessary stipulation, at least as a guide to control the usual mechanical tests, some doubt has been thrown upon the accuracy of the analytical results obtained by different chemists. To any one having the least acquaintance with chemistry, it is quite clear that if exactly similar results are to be obtained from the same borings of steel, exactly the same methods must be used by the different analysts. Hence the necessity (if complications are to be avoided) of establishing what I may call standard or normal methods, to be used both by the inspectors and by the chemists at the works. Remembering that the application of chemistry to steelrail inspection is yet in its infancy, it is of great importance to possess a perfect acquaintance with the best methods in use. Being myself a grateful pupil of Professor Eggertz, of the School of Mines in Sweden, it occurred to me, two years ago, that I could not do better than start a laboratory of my own, and engage one of his pupils, Mr. Troilius, for the purpose of analyzing the steel borings from mechanically-tested rails, so that I might thus obtain without delay thoroughly accurate determinations. Moreover, in order to carry on the operations in perfect accordance with the methods used at the steel works in England and Germany, where I had to control the manufacture, I deemed it desirable to allow Mr. Troilius to go through a course of training at these works; and I gladly seize this opportunity of expressing my grateful acknowledgments to several works in England and in Germany for affording every facility for such an exchange of information as mas found necessary in arriving at the best analytical methods to be used.
Citation
APA:
(1882) Harrisburg Pa. Paper - Chemical Methods for Analyzing Rail-SteelMLA: Harrisburg Pa. Paper - Chemical Methods for Analyzing Rail-Steel. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1882.