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Institute Committees (dd300a27-52d8-4624-9de4-2f2335c5e7a0)Executive SIDNEY J. JENNINGS, Chairman GEORGE D.-BARRON J. E. JOHNSON, JR. EDWIN LUDLOW ROBERT M. RAYMOND Membership KARL EILERS, Chairman LEWIS W. FRANCIS J. E. JOHNSON, JR. LOUIS D. HUNTOON
Jan 9, 1918
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A Case of Season Cracking in Low Karat Gold ? with Discussion on Low Karat GoldBy J. L. Christie
A recent case of failure of a-low karat gold alloy by stress-corrosion cracking is of interest because it illustrates a principle frequently overlooked: the relation between high residual stress and h
Jan 1, 1945
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AIME Local Sections[ ] [LOCAL SECTION CODE (Numbers indicate Sections) No. Section LI Alaska L50 Adirondack L2 Arizona L58 Arkansas L84 Balcones L66 Billings Petr. L3 Black Hills L4 Boston L76 Caracas
Jan 1, 1961
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Papers - - Produciton - Foreign - Petroleum Development in Germany during 1934By Walter Kauenhowen
The production of crude oil in Germany during 1934 totaled about 2,200,408 bbl., a 33 per cent increase over the 1,670,109 bbl. produced in 1933. This is an extension of a yearly increase which has co
Jan 1, 1935
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Institute Committees (485c18a1-0b10-4bc3-9317-c69992f74e04)Executive SIDNEY J. JENNINGS, Chairman. GEORGE D. BARRON J. E. JOHNSON, JR. EDWIN LUDLOW ROBERT M. RAYMOND Membership KARL EILERS, Chairman LEWIS W. FRANCIS J. E. JOHNSON, JR. LOUIS D. HUNTOO
Jan 6, 1918
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Institute Committees (f02243a3-253a-43af-a3dd-3e1570dc3454)Executive SIDNEY J. JENNINGS, Chairman GEORGE D. BARRON J. E. JOHNSON, JR. EDWIN LUDLOW ROBERT M. RAYMOND Membership KARL EILERS, Chairman LEWIS W. FRANCIS J. E. JOHNSON, JR. LOUIS D. HUNTOON
Jan 11, 1918
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Institute Committees (143dce3c-7213-4f6c-b01d-7db8efcebe3d)Executive SIDNEY J. JENNINGS, Chairman GEORGE D. BARRON J. E. JOHNSON, JR. EDWIN LUDLOW ROBERT M. RAYMOND Membership KARL EILERS, Chairman LEWIS W. FRANCIS J. E. JOHNSON, JR. LOUIS D. HUNTOON
Jan 7, 1918
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Institute Committees (f600d4b0-ccd6-46ee-9b1a-ba8d881bd8ad)Executive SIDNEY J. JENNINGS, Chairman GEORGE D. BARRON J. E. JOHNSON, JR. EDWIN LUDLOW ROBERT-M. RAYMOND Membership LEWIS W. FRANCIS KARL EILERS, Chairman J. E. JOHNSON, JR. LOUIS D. HUNTOON
Jan 2, 1919
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Resistance of Copper-silicon-manganese Alloys to Corrosion by AcidsBy H. A. Bedworth
ALLOYS of copper and silicon have been known for one hundred years or more but the commercial development of this type of alloy has taken place during the past few years. In 1905, Sperry1 proposed the
Jan 1, 1929
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Dedusting and Dust Collection (CHAPTER 20)By Thomas L. Garwood, F. C. Menk
I T is generally accepted that no method of coal cleaning except froth flotation is effective in cleaning dust. In the majority of coals mined in the United States the dust sizes contain a high percen
Jan 1, 1943
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Institute of Metals Division - The Precipitation of Carbon from Alpha-Iron II KineticsBy R. H. Doremus
From measurements of carbide precipitation rates in a iron it was concluded that the carbides nucleated on dislocations in both strained and unstrained samples, except for the latter at lower temperat
Jan 1, 1961
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Physical and Chemical Properties of Coal in Relation to ClassificationBy H. F. Yancey
PHYSICAL properties have been used for a long time in characterizing different kinds of coal, and physical properties, such as friability and slacking, have been included with chemical properties in g
Jan 1, 1932
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Papers - Hardenability - Effect of Sixteen Alloying Elements on Hardenability of Steel (Metals Technology, September 1943) (With discussion)By Stewart L. Toleman, Robert H. Hafner, Irvin R. Kramer
In his paper on the calculation of harden-ability from chemical composition, Gross-mannl discussed the effect of most of the alloying elements used commercially. The purpose of the work reported in th
Jan 1, 1944
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Papers - Hardenability - Effect of Sixteen Alloying Elements on Hardenability of Steel (Metals Technology, September 1943) (With discussion)By Robert H. Hafner, Irvin R. Kramer, Stewart L. Toleman
In his paper on the calculation of harden-ability from chemical composition, Gross-mannl discussed the effect of most of the alloying elements used commercially. The purpose of the work reported in th
Jan 1, 1944
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Technical Papers and Notes - Institute of Metals Division - The Contribution of Twinning to Fiber TexturesBy B. D. Cullity
AS methods for measuring fiber textures become more exact, it becomes justifiable to scrutinize an observed pole-density curve for evidence of minor texture components. These are disclosed by minor ma
Jan 1, 1959
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Synthesis Of Some FerritesBy Arthur Tauber, Horst Kedesdy
FERRITES are sintered metallic oxides of the spinel structure type1 and belong to the class of soft ferromagnetic materials. Similar to a ceramic, they can be formed and fired to a dense body, exhibit
Jan 7, 1957
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Standardizing Rock Crushing TestsBy Myron Rodgers
IN rock- or ore-crushing tests all data, in order to be valuable for study and comparison, should be obtained and tabulated under conditions as uniform as possible. The results of many such tests have
Jan 9, 1915
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Some Electrical Properties Of Nickel And Monel WiresBy M. A. Hunter
THIS paper gives the results of an investigation of the specific resistance and temperature coefficient of the electrical resistance of nickel and its important alloy, monel metal. For most of the pur
Jan 5, 1922
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The Instability Of Low-Expansion Iron-Nickel-Cobalt AlloysBy Francis M. Walters, Irvin R. Kramer
THE substitution of cobalt for part of the nickel in Invar was found by P. H. Brace1 to lower the coefficient of expansion. Scott1 extended the use of cobalt to alloys of higher inflection temperature
Jan 1, 1941
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Electrostatic Precipitation ? DiscussionGERARD B. ROSENBLATT,* Salt Lake City, Utah (written discussion?). -Mr. Eschholz attacks this problem from what appears to me to be the proper angle. He does not limit his viewpoint to the attainment
Jan 10, 1918