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  • AIME
    New York September, 1890 Paper - A Suspended Feed-Table for Rolling-Mills

    By James Morgan

    The convenience of mechanical arrangements for handling ingots, blooms, billets, bars, beams, etc., and feeding them to the rolls, is so universally recognized as to require no demonstration. In th

    Jan 1, 1891

  • AIME
    Symposia - Symposium on Creep of Nonferrous Metals and Alloys - Creep Characteristics of a Phosphorized Copper - Discussion

    By H. l. Burghoff, A. I. Blank

    J. J. Kanter.*—The authors of this paper have demonstrated that at 500°F their alloy will elongate, under appropriately adjusted stress, one or two per cent over a period of 6000 hr. Then they show th

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Cartels-Their Significance for American Business

    By AIME AIME

    FREE competition, long the controlling ideal of domestic trade within the United States, has had the fundamental geographical advantage of functioning in the world's largest area of unrestricted

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Wet Dust Suppression Brightens Mineral Processing Picture

    By Kent W. Pilz

    Wet dust suppression can be achieved by 1) confinement of the dust within the dust producing area with a curtain of moisture, 2) wetting of the dust by direct contact between the particles and dro

    Jan 7, 1972

  • AIME
    Properties - Chromizing of Steel (Metals Technology, October 1942) (with discussion)

    By Robert H. Hafner, Irvin R. Kramer

    In recent years considerable interest has been shown in surface-alloyed metals, particnlarly those of chromium (chromized steels), which have excellent corrosion resistance under a variety of

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Properties - Chromizing of Steel (Metals Technology, October 1942) (with discussion)

    By Robert H. Hafner, Irvin R. Kramer

    In recent years considerable interest has been shown in surface-alloyed metals, particnlarly those of chromium (chromized steels), which have excellent corrosion resistance under a variety of

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Charles Will Wright - An Interview By Sumner M. Anderson

    By Sumner M. Anderson

    Anderson: Will, I have known you for only the past 30 years of your extraordinary mining career, and have often wondered just how it got started. Wright: I suppose you might say it was largely a m

    Jan 8, 1968

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - Flotation of Barite from Magnet Cove, Arkansas (Mining Technology, May 1941) (with discussion)

    By James Norman, Benjamin S. Lindsey

    Barite (BaSO4) is the most important industrial barium mineral from the standpoint of quantity consumed. In 1938 the amount was 365,000 tons. Its uses are numerous, some of the more important being in

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - Flotation of Barite from Magnet Cove, Arkansas (Mining Technology, May 1941) (with discussion)

    By Benjamin S. Lindsey, James Norman

    Barite (BaSO4) is the most important industrial barium mineral from the standpoint of quantity consumed. In 1938 the amount was 365,000 tons. Its uses are numerous, some of the more important being in

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Index

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    St. Louis Paper - Tests of Manganese Steel

    By Joseph D. Weeks

    When I presented at the Chicago Meeting of the Institute, in May, 1884, a paper on Hadfield's manganese steel,* which had about that time been brought to the notice of steel manufacturers, I prom

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Amenia Paper - Notes on the Iron Ore and Anthracite Coal of Rhode Island and Massachusetts

    By A. L. Holley

    The existence of iron ore and anthracite coal in the neighborhood of Providence, R. I., baa long been known, chiefly as a geological fact; that these materials, so near to each other and to tidewater,

    Jan 1, 1879

  • AIME
    Pittsburg Paper - Professional Ethics

    By R. W. Raymond

    In June, 1906, I delivered to the graduating class of Lehigh Cniversity an address upon this subject, the substance of which, with sundry omissions and additions, was subsequently repeated, in October

    Jan 1, 1911

  • AIME
  • AIME
    New York Paper - The Determination of Silicon in Ferro-Silicons ; Its Occurrence in Aluminum as Graphitoidal Silicon; and a study of Its Reactions with Alkaline Carbonates

    By Henry J. Williams

    The main difficulty in the determination of silicon in pig-irons containing very high percentages of that element, has been due to their almost complete insolubility in acids, or mixtures of acids. Th

    Jan 1, 1889

  • AIME
    Bibliography

    References are in all cases to the earliest known editions. In the few cases where the first edition has been unavailable for consultation, the particular one studied is indicated. English translation

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Commercial Movement of Zinc and Copper

    By Salinger, Herbert

    WITH the large amount of metallurgical re- search work now being done and the constant effort of the engineer to effect economies of operation, I think it is a safe prediction that the next few years

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Atlantic City Paper - Discussion of the paper of Messrs. Nitze and Purington on the Kotchkar Gold- Mines, Ural Mountains, Russia (see p. 24)

    PROF. Henry Louis, Newcastle-on-Tyne, England (communication to the Secretary): I have read this paper with much pleasure. It presents a very accurate summary of a very interesting district. Like the

    Jan 1, 1899

  • AIME
    Topographical Surveying and Keeping Survey Notes

    By Richard P. Rothwell

    THE communication which I have to lay before my fellow-members of the Institute, is no elaborate paper, nor the statement of any great discovery ; it is simply the record of convenient methods of cond

    Jan 1, 1875