Admitting that, where preliminary roasting is necessary, the best results can be obtained with the water-jacketed blast furnace (this being more especially the case where labor is an expensive item), we have still as an alternative the method of smelting raw in the Scotch hearth. At one works, which I recently visited, all the ore was smelted raw; at another, all the ore received a preliminary roast, and it is instructive to compare the results obtained in the two cases. The following data refer to a fairly “free-smelting” galena assaying nearly 80 per cent. of lead.

When smelting raw ore in the hearth, fully 7½ long tons can be treated in 24 hours, the amount of lead produced direct from the furnace in the first fire being 8400 to 9000 lb.; this is equivalent to 56 to 60 per cent. of lead, the remaining 24 to 20 per cent. going into the fume and the slag.

When smelting ore which has received a preliminary roast of two hours, 12,000 lb. of lead is produced direct from the hearth, this being equivalent to 65 per cent. of the ore. When the ore is roasted, the output of the hearth is practically the same for all ores of equal richness; but when smelting raw, if the galena is finely divided, the output may fall much below that given herewith; while, on the other hand, under the most favorable conditions it may rise to 12,000 lb. in 24 hours, or even more.

I had an opportunity of seeing a parcel of galena carrying 84 per cent. of lead (but broken down very fine) smelted raw. The ore was kept damp and the blast fairly low; but, in spite of that, a quantity of the ore was blown into the flue, and only 5100 lb. of lead was produced from the hearth in 24 hours.

Galena carrying only 65 per cent. of lead does not give nearly as satisfactory results when smelted raw in the hearth; barely six tons of ore can be smelted in 24 hours, and only 4500 to 5400 lb. of lead can be produced directly. This is equivalent to, say, 43 per cent. of the ore in the first fire; the remaining 22 per cent. goes into the slag or to the flue as fume. Moreover, the 65 per cent. ore requires 1500 lb. of coal in 24 hours, while the 80 per cent. galena uses only 1000 lb.

Turning now for a moment to the costs of smelting raw and of smelting after a preliminary roast, we find that (in the case of the two works we have been considering) the results are all in favor of smelting raw, so far as a galena carrying nearly 80 per cent. is concerned.

The cost of smelting, per ton of lead produced, is given herewith:

ORE SMELTED RAW

Smelters’ wages$2.04
Smelters’ coal (425 lb.) 0.38
Total$2.42