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Bessemer Converter Bottoms
By Robert Forsyth
IN working the Bessemer process, the bottom of the converter has always been a source of trouble and annoyance, and the subject of more experiments, probably, than any other part of the complex mechan
Jan 1, 1876
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Brückner Cylinders
By N. E. Cone
IT is somewhat surprising that among the many mechanical devices that were brought into the State of Colorado, that the Brückner cylinders alone have stood the test for roasting ores. The brick walls
Jan 1, 1876
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Blast-Furnace Hearths and In-Walls
By E. C. Pechin
AT the September meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute of Great Britain, Mr. Charles Wood, of the Tees Iron-works, read an interesting paper on "Further Improvements in Blast-Furnace Hearths," which
Jan 1, 1876
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Blast-Furnace Statistics
By John A. Church
IN the year 1874, when the price of pig-iron was still high, that staple product became the subject of discussion in the newspapers and among those philosophers who are determined to know the "reason
Jan 1, 1876
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Comparisons of Blast-Furnace Results
By Frank Firmstone
IT is proposed to consider here only comparisons made between results obtained when the materials employed are precisely the same, two furnaces at the same works for example, or the same furnace under
Jan 1, 1876
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The Mints and Assay Offices of Europe
By Pierre de P. E. M. Ricketts
HAVING had occasion while in Europe during the past summer to visit some of the foreign mints and assay offices connected with the same, I thought a brief description of the general process of coining
Jan 1, 1876
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Notes on the Occurrence of Siderite at Gay Head, Mass.
By William P. Prof. Blake
THE occurrence of siderite in beds of considerable thickness in the clay formations of Martha's Vineyard, Mass., may have some economical importance, and is at least interesting in a scientific p
Jan 1, 1876
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The World’s Product of Silver
By R. W. Raymond
RECENT literary labors have led me to the compilation of the following tables and estimates, which may possess interest for my colleagues in the Institute, and which are here submitted without comment
Jan 1, 1876
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The Inadequate Union of Engineering Science and Art.*
By A. L. Holley
THE application of scientific methods to the investigation of natural laws and to the conduct of the useful arts which are founded upon them, is year by year mitigating the asperity and enlarging the
Jan 1, 1876
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Comparison of Results from Open-Topped and Closed-Topped Furnaces
By Frank Firmstone
IN 1871, two furnaces at the Glendon Iron Works, which had been blown out on account of the "coal strike," were altered from the open-top plan with side flues for collecting the gas, to closed tops wi
Jan 1, 1876
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Repairing The Upper Part of a Furnace Lining Without Blowing Out
By Frank Firmstone
WE found it necessary, in December, 1874, to repair the upper part of the lining in No. 5 furnace at Glendon, and, as we succeeded in doing it with comparatively little trouble, a description of the p
Jan 1, 1876
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On The Percentage of Iron in Certain Ores
By Albert H. Chester
DURING the summer of 1875 I visited some of the iron mines of Houghton County, Mich., and was quite interested to observe the progress made there within a. few years. Working in open pits is gradually
Jan 1, 1876
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On the Use of Natural Gas for Puddling and Heating, at Leechburg, Pennsylvania
By A. L. Holley
THE occurrence of this gas, in quite appreciable. quantities, has been observed for many years in its escape along the creeks of Western Pennsylvania, and more recently, in much larger quantities, fro
Jan 1, 1876
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The Manufacture Of Ferro-Manganese In Georgia
By Willard P. Ward
IT is the object of the present paper to bring to the notice of members of this Institute, the results of experiments made during the past six months in the manufacture of the alloys of iron and manga
Jan 1, 1876
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Furnace Hearths
By George Asmus
CLOSED front, or open front for blast-furnaces, has been for a number of years a much discussed question among the furnace-men in every country where iron is made. As blast-furnaces are costly structu
Jan 1, 1876
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The Midlothian, Virginia, Colliery In 1876
By Oswald J. Heinrich
IN the coal review for the United States for 1875, the Engineering and Mining Journal, January 1st, 1876, remarks about the Richmond coal basin " It has contributed but little to the supply of fuel d
Jan 1, 1876
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The Velocity of Blast-Furnace Gas
By John A. Church
THE Lake Superior blast-furnaces probably represent the maximum economy of fuel possible in this country. They smelt an ore which is very rich and easily reducible, and as the small amount of gangue p
Jan 1, 1876
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Suspended Hot-Blast Stoves
By John Birkinbine
A RETROSPECT of the growth of the production of pig-iron for the past half century would be the history of the invention and introduction of heated blast as applied to the smelting of iron ores. As th
Jan 1, 1876
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The Swansea Silver Smelting and Refining Works of Chicago
By J. L. Jernegan
IN a former paper laid before the Institute, entitled Lead and Silver Smelting in Chicago, I endeavored to give a description of the manner in which argentiferous lead ores from the far West were trea
Jan 1, 1876
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Annual Meeting, Dover, N. J., Annual Meeting, Dover, N. J., May, 1875,
THE meeting was opened, Tuesday evening, May 25th, by an address from the President, R. W. Raymond. The following persons having been duly proposed for members and associates of the Institute, were re
Jan 1, 1876