New York Paper - Effect of Sulfur and Oxides in Ordnance Steel (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
William J. Priestley
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
24
File Size:
1588 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1922

Abstract

In the manufacture of gun forgings and other steel parts that, in service, are subject to sudden high stresses and shocks, it is most desirable to use steel possessing the greatest toughness and ductility possible without sacrifice of strength. In order to obtain this condition, it is necessary to procure steel that shows the highest possible elongation and reduction of area without lowering the tensile strength and clastic limit. Proper heat treatment of the steel can control this condition within certain limits. When heat treatment has failed to produce the desired results, metallurgists have used steels containing molybdenum, zirconium, vanadium, chromium, tungston, etc. The purpose of this paper is to describe a method by which these desired physical properties may be procured—by the elimination of certain impurities that inherently exist in steel made by the open-hearth process, and without the use of expensive alloys. Design of Gun Forgings In the manufacture of gun forgings, a certain elastic limit is fixed by the designer, and the walls of the gun arc made of the proper thickness, allowing a suitable factor of safety for the high stresses and sudden shocks that occur during gun firing. The clastic strength of the gun is about 1.4 times the stress set up at any point along the bore of the gun during firing with the maximum powder charge. As the stresses set up in the walls of the gun during firing are mostly "tangential," all physical tests are taken in this direction. Due to the length of the forgings, these tangential test bars are always taken at right angles and transverse to the direction of flow of the metal in forging. Furthermore, test bars taken across the grain of the metal will more frequently expose defects and foreign inclusions in the steel than will bars
Citation

APA: William J. Priestley  (1922)  New York Paper - Effect of Sulfur and Oxides in Ordnance Steel (with Discussion)

MLA: William J. Priestley New York Paper - Effect of Sulfur and Oxides in Ordnance Steel (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1922.

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