B. i.—Avoiding Leakage of Cold Air.—The admission of cold air was the cause of much waste in the older processes of working. Each time the doors were opened, either at the fire-box, or during charging on to the hearth, large quantities of cold air were admitted; air entered through the working door whilst slag was skimmed off, whilst matte was being tapped, and whilst the furnace hearth was being clayed; all of which operations occupied considerable time. The doors were opened during the levelling down of the fresh charges, and at later periods when the charge was stirred and the half-fused masses sticking to the bottom were worked up.

In modern practice, an essential feature of working is to keep all the doors closed as much as possible, and, as will be indicated shortly, every means is taken to eliminate the heat losses from the causes just referred to. Air leakage is also occasioned by bad grating, which causes the formation of channels in a few parts of the bed of fuel, admitting excess of air at these places, instead of causing it to come regularly through the bed in all parts. Channelling is now checked by the drop of suction-pressure in the flues, as registered by the manometer.

B. ii.—Prevention of Radiation through Walls and Roof.—Such heat losses are now minimised by thickening these parts, and blanketing the outside of the roof with sand, keeping the construction together by very heavy bracing.

B. iii.—Prevention of Cooling of the Hearth on Withdrawal and on Charging.—By far the most important cause of heat losses in working was occasioned by the withdrawal of the whole of the melted products, the charging of fresh cold ores, and the efficiency of the furnace was very greatly reduced in consequence. In the older methods, fully three-quarters of the time and fuel, and almost all the labour, were spent in manipulating the charges and bringing them up to the point of fusion, the actual smelting operation being responsible for but a small proportion. The withdrawal of the hot slag and matte abstracts much of the heat of the furnace, and the cold charge which is fed in, not only cools the furnace hearth on which it rests, but being a poor conductor, prevents the heat from again penetrating through it to the hearth and to the undermost portion of the charge. It has been estimated through the use of pyrometers, that the temperature in the furnace after such withdrawal and recharging may drop to less than 700° C.—a dull red heat—and there is no way under such circumstances of heating up the hearth again, except by conduction through the charge. Some hours’ hard firing were thus required to bring the furnace to the desired temperature again, after which it was necessary to re-open the working doors, in order to stir the materials so as to prevent the half-fused masses, still lying on the hearth, from sticking to it. This also occasioned delay in the operations, and caused much waste of fuel, heat, and labour.

B. iv.—Utilising the Heat of Melted Charges for the Heating of Fresh Additions.—All the above difficulties, and many others, have been overcome by maintaining a deep pool of hot molten matte in the furnace, and by feeding hot charges upon this matte layer. These are two of the most vital and successful changes introduced into modern reverberatory practice, and will be reviewed in detail subsequently.

B. v.—Utilising the Heat of the Escaping Gases as much as possible.—Improvements in this direction have been brought about—

Modern Reverberatory Practice.—The requirements for the successful operation of the reverberatory furnace, and the methods for ensuring its efficient working which have just been reviewed, involve the application of the following principles, which are the essential factors in modern reverberatory smelting practice:—

1. Control of Furnace Products at the Roasters.—This feature has already been indicated in dealing with roasting practice. The importance of this system in the economy and efficiency of the furnace working is very marked.