Manganese Steel.
The magnetic properties of steel, to-day of supreme importance, have for ages excited curiosity. As long ago as 1774, Rinman observed that steel alloyed with manganese is non-magnetic. Here was a material for time-pieces which would free them from magnetic derangement. In the hands of Mr. R. A. Hadfield, of the Hecla Works, Sheffield, England, manganese steel has been produced in remarkable varieties. As the proportion of manganese is increased, the alloys manifest singular changes in their properties. When the manganese is four to six per cent., and the carbon less than one-half per cent., the alloy is brittle enough to be readily powdered by a hand hammer. When the proportion of manganese is doubled, the alloy displays great strength, which reaches its maximum when the manganese is fourteen per cent. No other material approaches manganese steel in its ability to resist abrasion; it outwears ordinary steel four times, much reducing the need for repairs, renewals, or pauses in work while worn-out parts are being replaced. It gives equally good service as the pins and bushings of dredges of the bucket-ladder type, lifting gold-bearing gravels and sands. It is used for centrifugal pumps in dredging sandy harbors, slips, or ponds, where the grit borne in the water plays havoc with ordinary steel surfaces. In ore-crushing manganese steel is particularly effective; a pair of jaws built of it have crushed 21,000 tons of flinty ore and were still good for 4,000 to 6,000 tons more, while the best chilled iron plates failed to crush as little as 4,000 tons.
This alloy is so hard that it cannot be machined or drilled by ordinary means; it must be treated by emery or carborundum wheels. Yet it is so malleable that it can be used for rivets when headed cold. It is so tough that it may be bent and twisted at will without rupture, so that it forms railroad switches, frogs, and crossings of great durability.