Scientific American Supplement, No. 360, November 25, 1882
When Sir Henry Bessemer, in 1856, made public his great invention, and announced to the world that he was able to produce malleable steel from cast iron without the expenditure of any fuel except that which already existed in the fluid metal imparted to it in the blast furnace, his statement was received with doubt and surprise. If he at that time had been able to add that it was also possible to roll such steel into a finished bar with no further expenditure of fuel, then undoubtedly the surprise would have been much greater.
Even this, however, has come to pass; and the author of this paper is now pleased to be able to inform this meeting that it is not only possible, but that it is extremely easy and practical, by the means to be described, to roll a steel ingot into, say, a bloom, a rail, or other finished article with its own initial heat, without the aid of the hitherto universally adopted heating furnace.
It is well understood that in the fluid steel poured into the mould there is a larger store of heat than is required for the purpose of rolling or hammering. Not only is there the mere apparent high temperature of fluid steel, but there is the store of latent heat in this fluid metal which is given out when solidification takes place.
It has, no doubt, suggested itself to many that this heat of the ingot ought to be utilized, and as a matter of fact, there have been, at various times and in different places, attempts made to do so; but hitherto all such attempts have proved failures, and a kind of settled conviction has been established in the steel trade that the theory could not possibly be carried out in practice.
The difficulty arose from the fact that a steel ingot when newly stripped is far too hot in the interior for the purpose of rolling, and if it be kept long enough for the interior to become in a fit state, then the exterior gets far too cold to enable it to be rolled successfully. It has been attempted to overcome this difficulty by putting the hot ingots under shields or hoods, lined with non-heat-conducting material, and to bury them in non-heat-conducting material in a pulverized state, for the purpose of retaining and equalizing the heat; but all these attempts have proved futile in practice, and the fact remains, that the universal practice in steel works at the present day all over the world is to employ a heating furnace of some description requiring fuel.
Various
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SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT NO. 360
NEW YORK, NOVEMBER 25, 1882
SOAKING PITS FOR STEEL INGOTS.
TEMPERING BY COMPRESSION.
ECONOMICAL STEAM POWER.
RIVER IMPROVEMENTS NEAR ST. LOUIS.
BUNTE'S BURETTE FOR THE ANALYSIS OF FURNACE GASES.
THE "UNIVERSAL" GAS ENGINE.
GAS FURNACE FOR BAKING REFRACTORY PRODUCTS.
THE EFFICIENCY OF FANS.
MACHINE FOR COMPRESSING COAL REFUSE INTO FUEL.
HANK SIZING AND WRINGING MACHINE.
IMPROVED COKE BREAKER.
IMPROVEMENT IN PRINTING MACHINERY.
A CHARACTERISTIC MINING "RUSH."--THE PROSPECTIVE MINING CENTER OF SOUTHERN NEW MEXICO.
THE SOY BEAN.
ON A NEW ARC ELECTRIC LAMP.
APPARATUS FOR OBTAINING PURE WATER FOR PHOTOGRAPHIC USE.
BLACK PHOSPHORUS.
COMPOSITION OF STEEP WATER.
SCHREIBER'S APPARATUS FOR REVIVIFYING BONE-BLACK.
SOAP AND ITS MANUFACTURE, FROM A CONSUMER'S POINT OF VIEW.
COTTON SEED OIL.
THE FOOD AND ENERGY OF MAN.
RATTLESNAKE POISON.
THE CHINESE SIGN MANUAL.
LUCIDITY.
ON SOME APPARATUS THAT PERMIT OF ENTERING FLAMES.
THE BUILDING STONE SUPPLY.
AN INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION.
A FARMER'S LIME KILN.
THE MANUFACTURE OF APPLE JELLY.
IMPROVED GRAPE BAGS.
UTILIZATION OF SOLAR HEAT.
HOW TO ESTABLISH A TRUE MERIDIAN.
DEFINITIONS.
TO FIND THE AZIMUTH OF POLARIS.
APPLICATIONS.
ANOTHER METHOD.
THE OCELLATED PHEASANT.
THE MAIDENHAIR TREE.
THE WOODS OF AMERICA.
THE SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT.
PUBLISHED WEEKLY.