Steels to Order.

What is chiefly sought in steel is tensile strength, next in value is elasticity; in some cases hardness is indispensable. By varying the proportions of the carbon, silicon and manganese added to his iron, the steel-maker produces an alloy with the tenacity, elasticity or hardness he wishes. Nickel, as a further ingredient, in certain proportions yields an astonishing gain. A steel containing fifteen per cent. of nickel has shown a tensile strength of 244,000 pounds to the square inch, four times as much as before admixture; the elastic limit also was much increased. Hardness and strength tend to exclude ductility, but nickel steel is at once strong, hard and extremely ductile; hence its use for armor plate, great guns, and the barrels of small arms. Nothing but the high price of nickel prevents these alloys from having wide utilization, for they mean lighter and therefore more economical machines and engines than those of ordinary steel. Many turbines actuated by water, steam or gas, are best operated at speeds forbidden to common steel, which would fly to pieces under the centrifugal stress exerted, yet these speeds are quite feasible and safe when nickel steel is employed. This alloy brings nearer the day of mechanical flight, first promising to transportation on land and sea engines increased in power while much diminished in weight. In exceptional cases, where the expense may be borne, we may expect soon to see nickel steel used for higher towers, longer bridge-spans, thinner boilers, than those of to-day. Part of the bridge crossing Blackwell’s Island, New York, is built of nickel steel. Even with costs at their present plane, it is worth while for the designer of machinery to remember that friction is reduced when masses become smaller, power for power. It is found profitable, for instance, to use nickel steel for the cylinders of automobiles of high power.

In many tools and implements two different kinds of steel are united with decided gain. Thus the cutting edge of a cold chisel is hard and brittle, while its shank, much less hard, is tough and able to resist the shocks it receives. So also a projectile is hardened at its point and nowhere else. Plowshares are often made very hard on their surfaces, with a backing which is comparatively soft but elastic enough to suffer no harm in the blows dealt by rough ground and stones. One of the drawbacks in the use of steel is its liability to corrosion. An alloy of 30 per cent. nickel and 70 per cent. steel has proved to be corrodible in but slight measure, affording a material of great value to the arts.