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2. On the application of Hot-Air Blasts in the Manufacture of Cast-Iron

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 March 2015

Clark
Affiliation:
Aberdeen
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Extract

The author first gives a general account of the process of manufacture of cast-iron previous to the recent improvements, stating the quantities of the various materials put into the furnace, namely, of the Ore, the Fuel, and the Flux. He next states the method suggested first by Mr Neilson of Glasgow, and tried at the Clyde Iron-Works, for increasing the product of the furnaces with the same expense of materials, which consists in previously heating the air thrown into the furnace, in order to accelerate combustion. The method is found to produce a vast saving both in the fuel and the flux, although a certain portion of fuel has, of course, to be separately consumed for the purpose of heating the air, which is done by causing it to traverse a recurved pipe placed within a suitable furnace. During the first experiments, in 1830, the air was heated to 300° Fahrenheit. In 1831, Mr Dixon of the Calder Iron-Works thought of substituting raw coal for the coke which had hitherto been employed for fuel, at the same time that the air was still farther heated to 600° Fahrenheit, and with complete success.

Type
Proceedings 1834–35
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1844

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