RI 3831 Improved Laboratory Concentration Table

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Will H. Goghill G. T. Adams H. S. Hardman
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
7
File Size:
286 KB
Publication Date:
Oct 1, 1945

Abstract

"Usually a newly developed machine leaves the factory ""on a wing and a prayer."" The manufacturer hopes that the operator will hasten to report defects. In turn, when the suggestions arrive the manufacturer makes the required changes and maintains close collaboration with the operator. Thus the history of our machines of today is written.Laboratory concentration tables are exceptions to growth by experiment and collaboration. Their operation never enters directly into the cost sheet; they are seldom used for longer periods than 10 minutes; and the experimenter, while hurrying to another job, accepts the table, good or bad, for a quick test on his ore. Thus we go back about 50 years when we use the preset in factory-built laboratory table.The Southern Experiment Station, Bureau of Mines, in cooperation with the University of Alabama, recognized the existence of a tabling problem net usually considered. That is, instead of using the table to test the ore, the ore was used to test the table. In this critical examination of laboratory table six defects were encountered (and remedied). They are:"
Citation

APA: Will H. Goghill G. T. Adams H. S. Hardman  (1945)  RI 3831 Improved Laboratory Concentration Table

MLA: Will H. Goghill G. T. Adams H. S. Hardman RI 3831 Improved Laboratory Concentration Table. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1945.

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