Washington D.C. Paper - Hot-Blast Stoves at the Edgar Thomson Furnace “D” and “E”

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 245 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1882
Abstract
When it was decided to erect these furnaces the company also decided to use the Cowper type of stoves. It was, however, desirable to improve upon the plan of the stoves then in operation, to avoid, if possible, some defects which had shown themselves in them. The stoves now in use at Furnaces " A," " B," and " C " are of the well-known type of Cowper stove, having a circular combustionchamber placed at one side of the stove, and a regencrator with crescent-shaped section, resting at the bottom oil cast-iron glatings, which are supported in turn by cast-iron girders, the products of combustion passing up the chamber, down through the flues of the regenerator, and thence to the chimney. The objection to this shape of stove, that the gases would not pass down the parts of regenerator lying beside and behind the combustion-chamber—the horns of the crescent, as it were,—did not apply to the newer form of stoves, with combustion-chamber having a straight wall next to the regenerator; but. there were other defects, the principal ones bring the small size of the openings through the regenerator and the material used for supporting it. The small passages (4" X 4") soon choked up, and when a part of them became entirely closed, not only was the effective heating surface greatly diminished, but as the remaining opening were not sufficient to absorb the heat
Citation
APA:
(1882) Washington D.C. Paper - Hot-Blast Stoves at the Edgar Thomson Furnace “D” and “E”MLA: Washington D.C. Paper - Hot-Blast Stoves at the Edgar Thomson Furnace “D” and “E”. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1882.