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Pyrometer Protection Tubes (1e751eb6-b59a-46af-8f7a-ba4ae247a538)By Otis Hutchins
IT is intended to discuss in this paper the protection appliances used for high-temperature pyrometer installations involving the use of platinum couples and describe some of the characteristics of a
Jan 9, 1919
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Pyrometer Shortcomings In Glass-House PracticeBy W. M. Clark
OUR interest in the matter of pyrometers and pyrometry is primarily that of a user of considerable quantities of heat-measuring equipment; and while we play be somewhat critical on the subject we have
Jan 8, 1919
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Pyrometric Measurement of Temperature of Dust-Laden Process GasesBy J. R. Wynnyckyj, R. Marr
Continuous measurement based on radiation pyrometry has often met with difficulties whose causes have been obscure. In this paper the experience gained with on-line pyrometry in utility and Kraft reco
Jan 1, 1989
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Pyrometry And Steel ManufactureBy A. H. Miller
TEMPERATURE considerations are of prime importance in the manufacture of steel products-front the time the metal is produced in the melting furnace, where the chemical reactions have a direct dependen
Jan 8, 1919
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Pyrometry Applied To Bottle-Glass ManufactureBy R. L. Frink
I FEAR that my treatment of this subject may not, in all instances, meet the approval of those who read my opinion as to the utility and efficiency of pyrometers in the making of glass, or bottle-glas
Jan 9, 1919
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Pyrometry As Applied To Manufacture Of Optical GlassBy Carl Keuffel
THE manufacture of optical glass is a new industry in this country. In 1914, after the war started, the supply of optical glass from Europe was cut off, but as there was a fairly large stock of glass
Jan 9, 1919
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Pyrometry At The Coke OvenBy Robert B. Sosman
THE relative temperature distribution within a coke oven and among the ovens in a battery can be obtained automatically for the operator's guidance by sighting a total-radiation pyrometer on the
Jan 1, 1942
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Pyrometry In Blast-Furnace WorkBy P. H. Royster
For a number of years the Bureau of Mines has been investigating certain problems relating to the blast furnace. In the course of these investigations it was desirable to measure, with the optical pyr
Jan 9, 1919
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Pyrometry in Blast-furnace Work - DiscussionA. L. FIELD, Cleveland, Ohio (written discussion*.-)In equation 2, B is used to denote the ratio of bases (lime plus magnesia ) to acids (alumina plus silica) it being stated that this ratio gives m
Jan 12, 1919
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Pyrometry In Rotary Portland Cement KilnsBy Leo Dana
As a part of an investigation conducted by the Cement Section of the Bureau of Standards, at the plant of the Security Cement & Lime Co., Security, Md., the High-temperature Measurements Section was c
Jan 9, 1919
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Pyrometry in the Ceramic Industries ? DiscussionFRANCIS T. OMENS, ? Watsontown, Pa. (written discussion§).-In the second paragraph, Dr. Thwing mentions the various stages through which clay ware. must pass but he does not analyze the third stage, o
Jan 11, 1919
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Pyrometry In The Manufacture Of Clay WaresBy F. K. Pence
THE reduction of the firing of clay wares to a science has been one of the most difficult problems of modern ceramic engineering. The number of factors involved in the treatment of these wares has bee
Jan 9, 1919
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Pyrometry In The Manufacture Of Optical GlassBy Albert Walcott
THE success of various operations in the manufacture of optical glass depends, in a large measure, on the ability to maintain proper heat control. A good pyrometer system is, therefore, a very necessa
Jan 9, 1919
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Pyrometry In The Tool-Manufacturing IndustryBy J. V. Emmons
THE processes of hardening and tempering steel tools within the past 15 or 20 years have been so developed that the forward strides of the industry can scarcely be followed by the average observer. No
Jan 9, 1919
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PyrophylliteBy Fred Chappell
Pyrophyllite, a hydrous aluminum silicate, physically similar to talc, receives its name from the Greek word Pyr, for fire and phyllite, a rock or stone. Firestone refers to its first recorded use as
Jan 1, 1960
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Pyrophyllite (1c05c7d3-b04b-4321-9909-2700e6df740d)By B. C. Burgess
AFTER many years of close and friendly association with talc and soap-stone, this orthographically distinguished mineral steps forth in this edition, for the first time in a chapter of its own. Pyr, t
Jan 1, 1949
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Pyrophyllite (38023a48-5ec6-4028-9d96-c26bf6275cc9)By C. S. Thompson, P. A. Ciullo
Pyrophyllite is a naturally occurring hydrous aluminum silicate with the molecular formula SiO,,AI,,(OH), or, as more commonly expressed, the oxide formula A120,~4Si02~H20. Pyrophyllite is rarely
Jan 1, 1994
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Pyrophyllite (86bc5e6c-9741-40cd-bb22-1c643e42581f)By B. E. Cornish
Most technical and statistical data published on pyrophyllite relating to production figures, uses, markets and sales, have in the past traditionally linked the mineral with talc and soapstone. This i
Jan 1, 1983
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Pyrophyllite Dust – Its Effects And ControlBy M. F. Trice
PYROPHYLLITE is a hydrous aluminum silicate (A12Si4O10(OH)2)1 that occurs in both the foliated and the massive forms. The foliated variety resembles talc in that it has a greasy feel, a pearly luster,
Jan 1, 1940
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Pyrophyllite Dust-Its Effect and ControlBy M. F. Trice
PYROPHYLLITE is a hydrous aluminum silicate (A12Si4010(OH)2)1 that occurs in both the foliated and the massive forms. The foliated variety resembles talc in that it has a greasy feel, a pearly luster,
Jan 1, 1940