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Grain Refinement Of Magnesium Alloys Without SuperheatingBy Ralph Hultgren, David W. Mitchell
MAGNESIUM alloys usually are superheated before casting in order to ensure fineness of grain. Superheat temperatures in common use range from 1600° to 1700°F while the casting temperature, which depen
Jan 1, 1945
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Magnesium Alloys - Grain Refinement of Magnesium Alloys without Superheating (Metals Technology, June 1945)By Ralph Hultgren, David W. Mitchell
Magnesium alloys usually are superheated before casting in order to ensure fineness of grain. Superheat temperatures in common use range from 1600" to r 7o0°F.; the casting temperature, which depends
Jan 1, 1945
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Alumina From Shale?Paralleling recent experiments in the U. S., the Mines Branch of the Department of Mines and Technical Surveys in Ottawa has developed a laboratory process for recovering cell-grade alumina from alumi
Jan 3, 1960
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New York Paper February, 1918 - The Economy of Electricity Over Steam for Power Purposes in and about the Mines (with Discussion)By R. E. Hobart
The development of the Hauto power plant and the claims made by various engineers that electricity was more economical than steam for power purposes in and about the mines, led the Lehigh Coal and Nav
Jan 1, 1918
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International Mineral Trade Series Part III and IVBy John D. Ridge, Betty S. Moriwaki
The significant chromite producers listed in Table I11 are not major steel producers, with the exception of the USSR. After manganese, chromium is the most important alloying metal in steel. It would
Jun 1, 1955
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Petroleum Economics - Various Aspects of Oil-stock PricesBy George W. Doffing
Numerous contradictory statements have been made in the past regarding the importance of the seasonal influence of demand for motor fuel on prices of oil securities. It has often been said that the ti
Jan 1, 1937
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New York Paper - February, 1918 - Slag Viscosity Tables for Blast-furnace Work (with Discussion)By A. L. Field, P. H. Royster
The first report on the slag viscosity work of the Bureau of Mines was made by one of the authors1 in 1916. It was concerned chiefly with the method of measurement. A paper2 on this phase of the work
Jan 1, 1918
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Modern Development Of The Combustion Of Blast-Furnace Gas With Special Reference To The Bradshaw Gas BurnerBy K. Huessener
Discussion of the paper of K. HUESSENER, presented at the New York. meeting, February, .1916, and printed in Bulletin No. -110, February, 1916, pp. 443 to 474. KARL NIBECKER, Youngstown, O.-It has be
Jan 5, 1916
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Dwight & Lloyd Patent Decision AffirmedTHE decision of the lower court (United States District Court for the Southern District of New York) in the suit of the Dwight & Lloyd Sintering Co., vs. John E. Greenawalt has been affirmed by the Un
Jan 1, 1928
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Producing - Equipment, Methods and Materials - Productivity of Wells in Vertically Fractured, Damaged FormationsBy L. R. Raymond, G. G. Binder
One primary purpose of hydraulic fracturing as a well stimulation technique is to overcome formation damage. The literature provides ways of designing fracture treatments and evaluating their results
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Combustion - A New Criterion for the Clinkering Characteristics of Coal Ash (T. P. 1656)By Raymond S. Weimer
Of the several characteristics of a coal that influence its suitability for use in a given piece of burning equipment, the clinkering and slagging characteristics of the ash of the coal are highly imp
Jan 1, 1944
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Combustion - A New Criterion for the Clinkering Characteristics of Coal Ash (T. P. 1656)By Raymond S. Weimer
Of the several characteristics of a coal that influence its suitability for use in a given piece of burning equipment, the clinkering and slagging characteristics of the ash of the coal are highly imp
Jan 1, 1944
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New York Paper - A Rapid Method for the Determination of Phosphorus in Certain OresBy T. Reed Woodbridge
The object of this paper is to bring to notice a method in use at the Cedar Point laboratory of Witherbees, Sherman & Co., for determining the phosphorus in the ore mined at Mineville, N. Y. This ore
Jan 1, 1889
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New York - Philadelphia Paper - The Present Situation as to the Specifications for Steel RailsBy William R. Webster
At the Richmond mecting in February, 1901, I presented for discussion the proposed rail-specifications of Committee No. 1 of the American Section of the International Association for Testing Materials
Jan 1, 1903
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Technical Notes - New Apparatus for Studying Pressure Induced Fracturing in Reference to Lost CirculationBy A. J. Teplitz, J. K. Rodgers, E. M. Pohoriles
This note is presented in order to call attention to a newly developed laboratory apparatus that appears to have interesting possibilities for the study of lost circulation of the pressure-parting typ
Jan 1, 1956
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New York Paper - Plant for Hadfield Method of Producing Sound Steel Ingots (with Discussion)By Sir Robert A. Hadfield
The Hadfield method of producing sound steel ingots has been the subject of a paper read before the Iron and Steel Institute, so that it will be unnecessary to describe it fully here. The object of
Jan 1, 1914
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Halifax Paper - A New Method for the Determination of Phosphorus in Iron and SteelBy J. B. Mackintosh
The general method which has been followed since the time of Heinrich Rose, and perhaps before, for the determination of phosphorus in iron and steel, is to dissolve the sample either in nitric acid,
Jan 1, 1886
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Solder, Its Use And AbuseBy Milton Lissberger
MILTON L. LISSBERGER, ? New York, N. Y.-Solder is a mechanical mixture of tin and lead, a fact which is susceptible of very simple demonstration. A bar of solder of a grade even as low as 30 per cent.
Jan 12, 1918
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Drilling and Producing – Equipment, Methods and Materials - Volume Requirements for Air or Gas DrillingBy R. R. Angel
Drilling rate is a parameter that should be considered in determining the volume requirements for air and gas drilling. The use of past methods which ignore the effects of the solids content upon the
Jan 1, 1958
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Application of Geology to the Discovery Of Zinc-Lead Ore in the Wisconsin-Illinois-Iowa DistrictBy Allen F. Agnew
Geologic studies for the Federal and State governments in the Wisconsin-Illinois-Iowa zinc-lead district were begun in 1835, and subse¬quent surveys were made in the three states at in¬tervals until 1
Aug 1, 1955