Weldless rings
A piece of soft steel 1 in. wide, 1⁄4 in. thick, 4 ins. long, is the stock used for this ring. With a centre-punch mark off 3⁄4 in. from each end. (See [sketch].) In each centre-punch mark punch a 1⁄4-in. hole through the piece. With a hot chisel cut between these holes half way through on one side. Turn it upside down and finish cutting through from the other side. Now drive the chisel through, widening the slot out. Trim up the inside of the slot. Cut away all rough edges. Upset the piece on the anvil after heating and drive down on the ends. This will increase the size of the hole by shortening the length and bulging the sides out. The piece is now put on the horn of the anvil and rounded into a ring. The ends are now trimmed off or driven down into the thickness, as shown in the drawing. This is the method of making a weldless ring. It is easily made out of soft steel. It would require a very fine grade of wrought iron to do a piece of work of this kind, for wrought iron is fibrous and unless great care is exercised in forging it will split at the ends along the grain when opening it after the slot is cut in.
Steel is much cheaper than wrought iron, another good reason for its use. For the making of nuts, too, it is better than wrought iron. All one needs to do is to cut a piece off the end of a square bar, the proper thickness, punch a hole in it, and square it up. If wrought iron were used, to get the same strength one would need to bend the iron around a mandrel in the shape of a ring so that the grain of the iron would run around the hole of the nut. Then it should be welded and shaped into a square nut.
CHAIN HOOK OF SOFT STEEL
A chain hook
Up to the present time our work has been with wrought iron entirely. This hook is to be made out of soft Bessemer steel, which of course is very different from high carbon steel. It is the cheapest of the steels. All building material, railroad rails, boiler plates, steel cars, etc., are made of this cheap soft metal. The process of manufacture is quite simple. Molten cast iron, taken from the cupola, or blast furnace, is poured directly into a so-called Bessemer converter—a pear shaped vessel. Air is blown through the mass of molten metal. The air adds oxygen to the bath, and increases the heat to a temperature high enough to burn out all the impurities from the cast iron. This converts it into steel. It requires no more than nine or ten minutes to convert fifteen tons of cast iron into soft steel. The air is shut off and a sufficient amount of ferro-manganese is added so as to give the proper amount of carbon. The liquid steel is poured into ingots and these ingots while still hot are rolled into the shape used for the market. A piece of this kind of steel you are going to use to make a hook. Soft steel can be worked in the same way as you work wrought iron. It is not fibrous like wrought iron and is not apt to split unless worked at a low temperature.
Stock: Soft steel, 51⁄4 ins. long, 3⁄4 × 1⁄2 in.