Papers - Secondary Metals - Reclaiming Non-ferrous Scrap Metals at Manufacturing Plants (With Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Francis N. Flynn
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
10
File Size:
453 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1930

Abstract

Many excellent papers, descriptive of the milling and smelting of every kind of commercial ores, the refining of virgin metals, the casting into various shapes demanded by the trade, the rolling into shapes best suited to the factory machinery and the making of composition alloys to suit every requirement have been issued by the many technical societies dealing with non-ferrous metals. It is a wonderful collection of papers, of which the mining and metallurgical engineers may well be proud, but strange as it may seem, metallurgists in general appear to take the stand that when they have delivered suitable alloys to the foundry and rolled products to the factory their duty to write papers has ceased, at least in so far as the A. I. M. E. is concerned. Still we read in the daily papers that the mining companies are absorbing metal-manufacturing industries. The purpose of this paper is to describe the reclaiming of non-ferrous scrap metals at manufacturing plants, taking as an example the automobile industry. Collection and Disposition of Scrap Until about five years ago, much of the factory scrap, with little or no preliminary treatment, was sold to secondary-metal smelters. Of late years the factory salvage department has become an important part, of the plant in reclaiming everything of value and incidentally does much of the work formerly done by the smelters. Like most good things, it is sometimes overdone, and much work is done at the factory with inexperienced men that could be done much better by experienced skilled labor at the custom smelting plants. Employees of the salvage department collect the waste products in all departments at the source and in that way avoid much contamination. Every reasonable precaution is taken to keep the scrap clean. It is hand-sorted, cut, burned, magnetized, concentrated, separated or compressed, as the case may be, preparatory for re-use in the plant or for selling to others.
Citation

APA: Francis N. Flynn  (1930)  Papers - Secondary Metals - Reclaiming Non-ferrous Scrap Metals at Manufacturing Plants (With Discussion)

MLA: Francis N. Flynn Papers - Secondary Metals - Reclaiming Non-ferrous Scrap Metals at Manufacturing Plants (With Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1930.

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