The Development Of Blast-Furnace Construction At The Boston & Montana Smelter

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
J. A. Jr. Church
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
22
File Size:
955 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 7, 1913

Abstract

I. EARLY FURNACES. COPPER blast-furnace construction in America has long recognized a general standard in the rectangular mater jacketed shaft with separate forehearth. The details, however, and especially those relating to shaft dimensions, have had to meet a great variety of conditions, and show no uniformity whatever. Selecting a few of the present day Western plants, we find furnace lengths varying from 12.5 to 87 ft., widths at tuyere level from 42 to 84 in., and heights above tuyeres from 5 ft. 4 in. to 22 ft. 4 in. ; and comparing present designs with those of the past, we meet contrasts no less striking. Unlike its transverse section, the length of a furnace has come to depend rather on the size of unit desired than on the requirements of smelting ; and if the question of length be ignored, several of the various existing designs can be grouped together on the basis of a common transverse section. This section, having a width at tuyere level of 56 in. and a height above tuyeres of 18 ft., was developed at Great Falls, and the story of its development contains some interesting features. Ground was broken for the Great Falls works in the spring of 1891. About a year later, the concentrator was able to begin operation, followed within the next few mouths by the Brueckner, reverberatory, and converter departments, and in April, 1893, by the first blast fur-
Citation

APA: J. A. Jr. Church  (1913)  The Development Of Blast-Furnace Construction At The Boston & Montana Smelter

MLA: J. A. Jr. Church The Development Of Blast-Furnace Construction At The Boston & Montana Smelter. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1913.

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