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CHAPTER XV

BESSEMER STEEL: THE ARMSTRONG CONTROVERSY

Pressed Steel Cups -- Bessemer Steel Boiler Plates -- Experiments with Bessemer Steel -- Steel Guns -- Cost of Bessemer Steel -- Bessemer Steel versus Wrought Iron -- Built-up Steel Guns -- Bessemer Steel-making at Sheffield

The late Ebenezer Parkes, of Birmingham, a well-known metallurgist and tube manufacturer, conceived the bold idea that copper tubes for locomotive boilers of, say, 2in. in diameter and 12ft. in length could be formed without a seam or joint from flat circular plates of copper of 27in. in diameter and about 3/16 in. in thickness. He forced these plates through an opening 11 in. in diameter, in a die under an hydraulic press; they thus became short cylinders. These cylinders were afterwards drawn out longer and less in diameter on steel mandrils, which were made for him at our Sheffield Works. He, however, found that the strain on ordinary sheet copper was so severe that many plates cracked and failed, and it was not until he obtained chemically-pure copper -- the result of electrolysis -- that his manufacture was a commercial success. On one occasion I met Mr. Parkes at my Works at Sheffield, and, in speaking of the extreme toughness of our mild steel, he said he had no doubt that he could force plates of it through his dies, as he was doing with copper. I must confess that I did not think this possible; but on his persisting in his assertion, I arranged to return with him to Birmingham the same evening, taking five discs of our mild steel, varying from 1/4 in. up to 3/4 in. in thickness. I was anxious also to try a very stout plate, and there happened, at the time, to be some locomotive boiler tube-plates (ordered by the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Company) in course of construction at our works. One of these was found to be sufficiently large to allow us to cut off a disc from one end, 27 in. in diameter, without spoiling the plate. Taking these discs, Mr. Parkes and I proceeded to Birmingham, and on the next morning we commenced operations. We succeeded in making these steel plates into deep cylinders of 11 in. in diameter. They were quite cold when operated on: had they been red-hot, those parts in contact with the cold dies would have become cooled, and stretching unequally with the hot parts, would inevitably have failed. Figs. 50 to 55 illustrate the mode of operation.

Bessemer Steel Boiler Plate being pressed into a Cup

In Fig. 50, A represents the ram of an hydraulic press, and B a circular punch, the lower angles of which are slightly rounded; C is a circular ring, or die, having a trumpet-shaped mouth, shown in section, and resting on the hollow bed D, of the hydraulic press. A circular recess of 27 in. in diameter was made on the upper side of the die to receive the plate of steel to be operated on; E, Fig. 50, shows the cold plate of steel placed in the die ready for bulging. The descent of the ram forced the plate into a dished form, shown at E in Fig. 51. The further descent of the ram, as shown in Fig. 52, drove the plate nearly through the die: it, however, still had its mouth slightly splayed. Another movement of the ram pushed the plate entirely through the die, and made it into a plain parallel cylinder, with a slightly-rounded bottom, as represented at Fig. 55. In spite of this marvellous transformation, in form and dimensions, the metal remained at all parts wholly uninjured, as was incontestably proved by the fact that the cylinder became a beautiful sonorous bell, in which the critical musical ear could not detect any fault in tone, due to crack or injury of any kind.

Now let us for one moment consider what changes the solid cold steel underwent, as it flowed like a piece of plastic clay, and suffered so great a change in the position of all its constituent particles. In Fig. 53 we have the original disc seen on edge; it was 3/4 in. in thickness, 27 in. in diameter, and 84 3/4 in. in circumference; both its sides were originally of the same area. When made into a cylinder or cup it measured on the outside 34 1/2 in. in circumference, and on the inside 29 in. only; the metal which originally formed its outer circumference had been reduced to 34 1/2 in. Such a change of form and flow of cold steel from one part of the mass to another, required enormous force, and yet so great was the toughness and resilience of this mild steel that the changes of form and dimension were possible without producing a symptom of rupture. I fearlessly challenge any person of ordinary intelligence to study, however slightly, these diagrams, and then to cast his eye on the accompanying illustration,

Bessemer Steel Boiler Plate pressed into a Cup, 1861

Fig. 56, Plate XX., which is a reproduction of this steel cup, without coming to the conclusion that in these early days of the Bessemer process we could, and did, produce a metal pre-eminently adapted to the construction of ordnance: a metal that could be manufactured from Swedish charcoal pig-iron in homogeneous, unwelded masses of from 5 to 20 tons in weight, at less than one-half the price paid for Lowmoor iron bars, from which the Armstrong gun coils were made. I cannot tell the precise date of the actual production of the cup illustrated, but I know it was many months before the great Exhibition of 1862. I can trace it back to that period by evidence that cannot be disputed. The Engineer newspaper of the first week in May, 1862, describing my exhibit of Bessemer steel, says:

There are also some extraordinary examples of the toughness of Bessemer steel made from British coke-made pig-iron, among which may be enumerated two deep vessels of one foot in diameter, with flattened bottoms and vertical sides; at the top edge, one of them is 5/8 in. and the other 7/8 in. in thickness. These are formed up in a press from flat circular discs of steel.

They can now be drawn into long tubes, either of their present diameter, or they may be reduced to locomotive boiler tubes of 2 in. in diameter; there is also shown an attempt to raise a piece of the best Staffordshire iron plate by the same tools; this only went about as deep in proportion as an ordinary soup plate before it fractured all around the punch, and almost fell into two pieces. It may be remembered that Mr. Parkes, who invented this beautiful system of making unwelded tubes, has been obliged to use the very highest quality of copper for that purpose; the ordinary copper of commerce generally cracks, but the Bessemer steel, as seen by these examples, stands this fearful ordeal with perfect safety.

On the closing of the Exhibition of 1862, I presented this cup to Dr. Percy, who placed it in the gallery of the Geological Museum in Jermyn Street, whence it was, many years ago, transferred to the South Kensington Museum. The Curator kindly allowed me to have a photograph taken of it, and from this photograph the engraving on Plate XX. has been made.

Since writing the above, I have called to memory an earlier date on which one of these deep cups was exhibited. I refer to the occasion of Sir William Armstrong's visit to Sheffield, as President of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, which held its summer meeting there on July 31st, 1861; in proof of this I refer to the copy of my Paper as printed and issued by that Institution. In the Proceedings of the Institution the Secretary interpolated, between the reprint of my Paper and the report of the discussion thereon, the announcement which is here reproduced.

Mr. Bessemer exhibited an 18-pounder gun made of the Bessemer steel cast in a single ingot of the required size and subsequently hammered, with a variety of specimens of the metal, broken to show the quality of the fracture; also some piston rods, a boiler plate flanged for a locomotive fire-box, and a plate bulged in a die without cracking or tearing; a plate of thin metal punched with a number of small holes very close together, and a tube of the metal which had been crushed flat without the surface of the metal cracking. He showed also one of the fireclay tuyères used for blowing the melted metal in the converting vessel, and specimens of the ganister used for lining the vessel and ladle, both new and after use.

The "variety of specimens of the metal broken to show the quality of the fracture" should have been described as "specimens crushed to show the toughness of the steel." "A plate bulged in a die" is the deep cup made from a flat piece of boiler plate 27 in. diameter, and already mentioned as being illustrated in Fig. 56, Plate XX. The tube of metal crushed flat without cracking (see C, Fig. 49, Plate XIX.) was similar to the crushed gun-tubes so many years exhibited in the South Kensington Museum, and now in the possession of the Iron and Steel Institute. Figs. 57 to 60, on Plates XXI, XXII., and XXIII., show other specimens exhibited at the meeting.

Square Bar of Bessemer Metal Twisted Cold, and shown at Sheffield, 1861

Square Bar of Bessemer Steel Twisted Cold, and shown at Sheffield, 1861

Square Bars of Bessemer Steel Twisted Cold, and shown at Sheffield, 1861

It is unnecessary to multiply examples, since those already given cannot fail to convince any unprejudiced person that in these early days of the Bessemer process all those manufacturers who understood it, and took the amount of care which is necessary in all properly-conducted manufacturing operations, were able to produce steel of high quality with as great a degree of regularity as is common with any other modes of production. I, however, cannot refrain from giving yet another instance of the wonderful tenacity and endurance of this metal when subjected to the most violent strains.

About the year 1862, a Mr. Thompson, of Bilston, took out a patent for a novel and ingenious mode of manufacturing Enfield rifle-barrels, and after many trials he chose Bessemer mild steel as the material most suitable for this purpose. Our works at Sheffield supplied him with large quantities of mild steel, in the form of round bars 3 in. in diameter. These were afterwards sawn into lengths of about 6 in., and when made red-hot were placed on end under the steam-hammer, which carried a cylindrical steel punch of 1 in. in diameter, having a conical end resembling an armour-piercing shot, as shown in Fig. 61.

Pressing Bessemer Steel Block for Rifle Barrel

The hammer A had projecting from it the punch B, beneath which was placed the steel piece C, shown partly pierced by one or two blows. This piece was placed over an opening in the anvil block D, and after two or three more blows it was pierced from end to end, forming a short tube from which no metal has been removed. This violent treatment did not split or injure the steel in any way, but was well calculated to show any defect if the metal operated upon was not absolutely sound. After the operation of punching, the short tubular piece was rolled between a pair of rollers having a series of tapering grooves formed on them, and also an enlarged recess to form the breech part out of the solid, so that a barrel in one piece without welding was produced. This was afterwards finished in the usual way. The severe test to which these mild steel barrels were subjected at the Proof House, Birmingham, is shown in the annexed tabular statement, which is taken from a Paper read by me at the Royal United Service Institution on May 2nd, 1864, and published in the Transactions, from which the Table herewith given is copied.

TRIAL OF TWO STEEL GUN-BARRELS (ENFIELD PATTERN), AT THE PROOF-HOUSE, BIRMINGHAM.
Barrels made from Bessemer Steel by Thompson's Patent process.
Barrels, 1853 Infantry Pattern, .577 bore. Bullets used, 715 grains. Diameter, .551 Length, 1.043. Ratio of length to diameter. 1.893.

 Result of Experiments: 

  1st round, charge 205 grains, 7 1/2 drachms powder, 1 bullet.
  2nd round, charge 224 grains, 8 1/4 drachms powder, 1 bullet.
  3rd round,         "                   "            2 bullets
  4th round,         "                   "            3 bullets 
  5th round,         "                   "            4 bullets
  6th round,         "                   "            5 bullets
       The barrels were now examined and found intact.
 
  7th round, charge 224 grains, 8 1/4 drachms powder, 6 bullets 
  8th round,         "                   "            7 bullets
  9th round,         "                   "            8 bullets 
 10th round,         "                   "            9 bullets 
 11th round,         "                   "           10 bullets 
 12th round,         "                   "           11 bullets 
 13th round,         "                   "           12 bullets 
 14th round,         "                   "           13 bullets 
 15th round,         "                   "           14 bullets 
 16th round,         "                   "           15 bullets 
                      Barrels found intact.

  17th round, charge 224 grains, 8 1/4 drachms powder, 16 bullets.
The firing was now continued with one barrel only, the nipple having been blown out of the other, which, still retaining its charge of 16 bullets, remained intact.
  18th round, charge increased to 269 grains, 9 3/4 drachms powder, 17 bullets.
  19th round,           "               "              "       "    18 bullets.
 *20th round,           "         413   "     15       "       "    and 25 bullets.
The barrel was then examined and found intact. Further test was deemed unnecessary. Proved by Mr. Samuel Hart, Assistant Proof-Master, *in the presence of Ezra Millward, Esq., Proof-Master at Birmingham, December 23rd, 1863.

With these examples of the extraordinary toughness and tenacity of both pure Bessemer iron and Bessemer steel, no one, with any knowledge of the violent strains to which the test pieces were subjected, can doubt the fact that between the copper-like toughness of the pure Bessemer iron, and the great tenacity of the more highly carburised steel which we were at that time supplying to engineers, for making every description of cutlery and cutting tools, there did exist, and could easily have been found by trial, the precise quality of steel most suitable for the construction of ordnance. It must be borne in mind that it was not until some ten years later, that is, in the year 1869, that any Siemens-Martin, or open-hearth steel, was made, and consequently that the only varieties of cast-steel then available for guns were crucible cast-steel and Bessemer cast-steel. The fact must also be recognised that both the difficulty and the cost of producing large masses of crucible steel increased greatly whenever the metal was required to be of the very mild quality known as low carbon steel, which is most difficult to fuse in crucibles, as well as to retain in fusion during the time occupied in filling a large mould from hundreds of separate small vessels. Hence the strong temptation the steel manufacturers had to supply a more carburised, and consequently a more easily fusible and less tough, steel than was specified; while the price of this crucible steel was greatly augmented as the ingot became larger, increasing to over £100 per ton. It is equally notorious that not one of these disadvantages applied to the Bessemer metal; it was, in fact, cheaper to produce a single mass of 10 or 20 tons in weight than to make the same weight in a number of small batches of 3 tons to 5 tons. Nor was there any greater difficulty in making the mildest possible quality of steel, because we always began by making pure soft iron. From the zero point of decarburisation the hardest qualities of steel could be made, differing by almost imperceptible gradations, and depending on the number of pounds of rich carburet of iron added to the pure iron for that purpose.

The material had been proved in all respects suitable for the manufacture of ordnance, and, as I have already said, Colonel Eardley Wilmot and I had arranged, under contract, to erect a Bessemer plant in the old gun foundry at Woolwich, which was amply large enough for that purpose. This project, had it been carried out, would have rendered wholly unnecessary the erection of a second arsenal at Elswick, built under the guarantee of the British Government at a cost of £85,000. It must also be borne in mind that by my process we had the advantage of being able to make, if desired, malleable iron guns in a single piece without a weld or joint, by founding, or by the combined processes of founding and forging, with or without hoops; so that if malleable iron, and not steel, had in reality been the best material for the construction of ordnance, such guns could have been produced at Woolwich Arsenal, either as complete gun-castings, or as ingots to be forged, at a cost not exceeding £6 or £7 per ton if made of British iron, and not exceeding £10 per ton if made of Swedish charcoal pig-iron; whereas the Lowmoor iron bars used to make the coiled guns cost over £20 per ton, and were the mere raw material to start with. Nor did the Bessemer pure malleable iron, if used for guns, admit of any of the charges that had been made to depreciate the value of steel for that purpose, namely, that it was very uncertain in quality, and could not be obtained of the precise degree of carburisation and toughness required.

Such a charge could not possibly be made in reference to pure iron, which was wholly decarburised, a condition which it was impossible to mistake during its manufacture, for the huge white flame issuing from the converter suddenly drops when all the carbon is burnt out, a result which occurs with unerring certainty. At all events, if Bessemer steel could not be depended upon at Woolwich, Swedish charcoal pig-iron, wholly decarburised, could have been made in masses of 10 to 20 ton, at a cost not exceeding £10 per ton, and of, at least, 5 tons per square inch greater tensile strength than Lowmoor bars, as was proved by Colonel Wilmot's experiments at Woolwich Arsenal; while the cost of the huge unwelded mass would have been less than half the cost per ton of the bar-iron used to make a welded coil with its many imperfect junctions.

I should like to say a few words here about the broad distinctive characters of the two materials, wrought or bar-iron, and cast homogeneous iron or steel. I need scarcely remind the reader that bar-iron making begins with the process of puddling, which produces a ball or mass of iron that, in every case, is mechanically mixed with fluid scoria, and sometimes with sand and dry oxide or iron scale. From this crude material, puddle bars are made, and these are cut into lengths of 2 ft. or 3 ft., and formed into a bundle or pile, which is brought up to a welding heat in a suitable furnace, and then rolled into a merchant bar. This process of rolling and piling is repeated more than twice, and a bar is in this way produced, which to the eye appears, and is supposed, to have all its separate parts welded or united so as to form an undivided and indivisible mass. But this is not so. I have never seen a bar of wrought iron produced by puddling that, in two or three minutes, by a very simple treatment, I could not separate more or less perfectly into its component bars, which are in reality never thoroughly united, although they adhere more or less soundly. In fact, so imperfect is this adhesion called "welding," that whenever bar-iron is worked under the hammer, it is necessary to forge it at such a degree of heat as will continue the welding process; for by working it much below this temperature, the imperfectly coherent mass begins at once to separate at all the junctions between the several bars of which it is composed, and tumbles to pieces.

I will describe an experiment clearly illustrating this fact. Two pieces of ordinary commercial bar-iron of 1 in. square were heated to a blood-red heat, and put under a small steam-hammer, where they received several blows on alternate sides; the result was a complete disintegration of the mass, as shown in Fig. 62, Plate XXIV. The lower example was similarly treated on alternate angles, instead of on the flat sides. It may be supposed that the far-famed Lowmoor and other Yorkshire irons are exempt from this defect, but this is not so, the simple fact being that "best-best" iron has been piled more times than common iron, and the result of working it at a temperature that will not continue the welding process, only divides it into more numerous filaments than a bar of common iron. I may mention the fact that, on one occasion, during a short stay at my works at Sheffield, I had the honour of a visit from an active partner in one of the great Yorkshire firms which stand so deservedly high among bar-iron makers. I mentioned this fact of imperfect welding, and the consequent disintegration of bar-iron by simply working it at a temperature below welding heat. My visitor laughed outright at the possibility of such a thing happening to any bar-iron that his firm had ever turned out. I said: "If you will wait while one of my people goes to an iron warehouse in the town and purchases a bar of your iron, I will convince you that I am right." Well, he patiently waited until the bar was procured, and admitted at once that the brand stamped on it was his own. A short length was then cut from it and heated in his presence. It was put under one of the rapidly-moving tilt hammers at that moment being used in forging our bar steel at the same low heat. The result was that the Yorkshire iron bar divided, under this simple treatment, for about a foot of its length into a mass of fibres forming a veritable birch-broom, to the utter astonishment of the manufacturer.

Disintegrated Wrought-Iron Bars

At the time when the two bars of 1-in. square iron, shown in Fig. 62, Plate XXIV., were hammered, a similar bar of Bessemer mild steel was treated at the same temperature under the same hammer. The illustration, Fig. 63, Plate XXV., shows how it simply became extended into a flat undivided surface, without crack or rift in the material.

Bessemer Mild-Steel Bar, Flattened under Hammer

These examples of forging below a welding heat serve to show the imperfection inevitable in all puddled or welded iron; while the steel example also shows the continuity of parts resulting from the Bessemer steel or homogeneous iron being formed into an ingot while the metal is in a fluid state, hence producing an undivided and indivisible mass, however much it may be hammered, hot or cold.

It will be readily understood how deeply interested I was in the application of my invention to the construction of ordnance, and how much I felt encouraged by the high appreciation of what I had achieved by so competent a person as Colonel Eardley Wilmot. Although I saw that there was an almost endless variety of applications in industry to which this cheap and superior metal could be advantageously applied, I nevertheless felt a strong desire to see it used in the manufacture of guns. Its summary rejection at Woolwich, however, without even a trial, furnished me with yet another proof of the utter foolishness of relying on Government, and made me throw up all idea of following that branch of manufacture as a speciality. With a still lingering desire to put my material to the test of gun-making, I had looked pretty deeply into the subject, in order to see what had already been done by others, and how far the road was still open to me as a gun-manufacturer. On searching at the Patent Office I found the specification of Captain Blakeley, dated February 27th, 1855; in this specification, Captain Blakeley described his invention as consisting of certain improvements in the construction of ordnance, in which an inner tube or cylinder of steel, gun metal, or cast iron, was enclosed in a case or covering of wrought iron or steel, which casing was made in parts, either shrunk on to a cylindrical tube, or forced cold on to a tube, the exterior surface of which was slightly conical, so as, in either case, to tightly grip the inner tube, adding materially to its strength and power of resisting internal pressure. This casing, whether made of cast-iron or steel, might itself be further supported or strengthened by one or more outer layers of rings or hoops, also put on under tension. Here we had clearly and distinctly laid down the vital principles embodied in all modern built-up guns, in this and in other countries -- that of external compression of the inner tube by an outer one; and, unless it can be shown that this patent of Captain Blakeley was anticipated by a prior invention, he must stand before the world as the originator and father of modern built-up artillery. From this patent I saw at once that it would be impossible for me to manufacture built-up guns having an internal steel tube, without direct infringement. Captain Blakeley, at this early period (February, 1855), had the sagacity to see that a steel tube or lining was an indispensible condition of a perfectly built-up gun: not only because of its homogeneous character and freedom from welded joints, and its greater cohesive strength, but also because of its greater hardness and power to resist the severe abrasion of its inner surface, caused by the studs on the projectile moving along the rifled grooves under immense lateral pressure. Although he knew that steel was the best possible material for the lining of the gun, he, nevertheless, thought it prudent to claim also the use of gun-metal and cast-iron, lest he should have his invention evaded by the substitution of either of these last-named homogeneous metals. He, however, evidently thought it unnecessary to guard himself against the possible evasion of his patent built-up gun by the substitution of a welded wrought-iron tube in place of a homogeneous steel one. This doubtless arose from his knowledge of the great inferiority of wrought-iron, as compared with steel, for such a purpose, and also from his practical experience, as an artillerist, of the searching and highly corrosive nature of the intensely-heated powder gases, which, sooner or later, find out and deeply corrode the numerous imperfectly-welded joints inevitable in a wrought-iron gun tube.

The natural effects of corrosion on wrought-iron bars must have been commonly observed. Take, as an example, an old pump-handle, and see how the once smooth and even surface is eaten into deep grooves and furrows by corrosion, commencing at, and following, all the lines where the several parts, of which the bar is composed, are imperfectly welded together. Or examine an old chain cable, the links of which were made of smooth round iron rods, and see the indented shape it has acquired, the once smooth surface of each link being grooved by corrosion of the metal where the parts were imperfectly welded in the original formation, even of the high-class iron used for cables. This is the effect of water only on ordinary wrought iron. If any one doubts the destructive effects of fluids more corrosive than water, let him put a bright, well-finished piece of bar-iron into water containing only one-tenth of its weight of sulphuric acid, and he will find that in less than one hour he will have a perfect picture of the arrangement of parts of which the bar is composed, showing all the imperfectly-welded fibres, like a beautifully engraved map. What, then, must be the result from the union of the oxygen in the saltpetre with the sulphur in gunpowder, producing sulphuric acid gas, acting under enormous heat and pressure within the gun, and searching out and attacking all its welded joints?

In my search at the Patent Office, I also found the provisional petition of Mr. William George Armstrong (afterwards Lord Armstrong), dated February 11th, 1857, being two years less sixteen days after the patent of Captain Blakeley, which is dated, 27th February, 1855. Annexed is a copy of Mr. Armstrong's provisional specification, issued under the authority of the Commissioners of Patents :-

(This Invention received Provisional Protection only.)

PROVISIONAL SPECIFICATION left by William George Armstrong at the Office Of the Commissioners of Patents, with his Petition, on the 11th February, 1857.

I, WILLIAM GEORGE ARMSTRONG, Of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, in the County of Northumberland, Civil Engineer, do hereby declare the nature of the said Invention for "Improvements in Ordnance," to be as follows :-

The improvements relate, firstly, to forming guns with the internal tube or cylinder of wrought iron or gun metal in one piece, surrounded by one or more cylindrical casings of wrought iron or gun metal shrunk upon the internal cylinder.

It will be seen that this proposal of Mr. W. G. Armstrong differs from the invention set forth in Captain Blakeley's prior patent, by substituting a wrought-iron internal tube for a steel one. As I could not lawfully make a built-up gun with collars or rings shrunk or forced on to a steel tube, and as I had no intention of evading Captain Blakeley's patent by using an inferior material for the inner tube of the gun, I abandoned all idea of the manufacture of built-up guns, and contented myself with supplying Captain Blakeley with steel tubes, or with forged steel guns complete in one piece, with the trunnions formed thereon out of the solid ingot. This manufacture I commenced as early as February, 1861; between that date and February 5th, 1863, I had manufactured at my works in Sheffield no less than seventy forged steel guns for foreign service, not one of which was ever returned to me, or was reported to be in any way defective.

All these orders for guns came to me spontaneously, and were never sought for by travellers, advertisements, circulars, or otherwise. But not one gun, or gun-block, was ever ordered of me by the British Government to test the qualities of this new steel, which at that period was the subject of the deepest interest and most careful examination by intelligent engineers in every State in Europe.

In the early part of the year 1859, the Bessemer Steel Works at Sheffield had regularly embarked in the manufacture of high-class steel for tools, and also for cutlery. For this purpose I had investigated the whole question of the supply from abroad of pure charcoal pig-iron, and had practically tried the famous Algerian iron from Bône and other mines, and also Indian, Nova-Scotian, Styrian, and Swedish pig-irons. Among the latter, I found on analysis, to my astonishment, that certain brands of charcoal pig, which, when delivered in Sheffield, cost only £6 to £7 per ton, were, when decarburised by my process, superior in purity to some of the highest brands of Swedish bar-iron, costing in Sheffield from £16 to £24 per ton. One Swedish brand of pig-iron in particular,costing £6 10s. delivered in Sheffield, was capable of making malleable iron by my process more pure than the far-famed Dannemora L bar-iron, worth £30 per ton in Sheffield, and with which particular brand the small malleable iron gun which I exhibited in May, 1859, at the Institution of Civil Engineers, was made. The analysis of this by Mr. Edward Riley has already been given (page 182 ante).

It will be conceded that if we obtained malleable iron of this extreme purity by my process, steel of very high quality could also readily be produced from that particular class of pig-iron.

Thus fortified by practical working and by actual analysis, and also by the purchase of a large consignment of this pure charcoal pig, we laid ourselves out at the Sheffield works for the production of high class tool steel, which we put on the market at l5s. or 20s. per hundredweight below the ordinary trade prices for this article. My process, so admirably adapted for the production of large ingots, was not so well fitted to make a great number of the 2 3/4 in. square ingots generally used in the Sheffield steel trade for tilting into small bars, which particular size of ingot had all its long-established trade rules and prices connected with it. So we determined to convert our pig into steel in large quantities, and to pour the converted metal into an iron cistern filled with water, in order to granulate the whole charge, and avoid all costs of moulds, casting, etc. By this means, and by the blending of different charges in definite proportions, we insured the production of steel of any desired temper, or degree of carburation, with an accuracy wholly unattainable by the old crucible system. For it must be borne in mind that in the ordinary crucible process the steel melter has to deal with bar-iron that has been subjected for several days, in a very large closed box or chamber, to the action of charcoal powder at a high temperature, during which treatment the iron bars absorb about one per cent. of carbon, more or less, dependent on time and on temperature. The amount of absorption depends also on the relative positions of the bars in the converting-box; hence, when the bars are thus converted into blister steel, it is almost impossible that the ends and the middle of any particular bar should be equally carburised, or that bars occupying different positions should absorb an equal quantity of carbon. After the withdrawal of the bars from the converting-chest, they are broken into short pieces for the melting crucible. Now the only mode of telling how far each piece of the broken bars has been carburised is to examine the crystalline fracture by the eye, and thus class and assort the various fragments for each quality of steel. It is wonderful how accurately a clever practised steel melter will judge of the state of carburation of the metal; but his judgment, after all, can only be approximate. Such visual determination is not like measuring or weighing the constituents of a mixture. Crucible steel is made in separate pots of from 40 lb. to 50 lb. each, and the steel maker cannot afford to make forty-five separate quantitative analyses of every ton of steel he turns out. Even if he could do so, after he had made the metal into ingots, he would not be more secure, since he could not alter the ingot when once cast. As a matter of fact, the precise degree of carburation of each 50lb. of steel produced in the old crucible process depended on the judgment of a man looking at the crystallised fracture of each piece he put into his crucible; and all must agree that it is highly creditable to those engaged in this mere guesswork that they got as near as they did to the quality required.

In the manufacture of tool steel, on the system which I laid down at my Sheffield works, we entirely eliminated this source of inequality, by dispensing with ocular examination of a crystalline fracture, which is subject to numerous modifications in character, from causes other than its precise degree of carburation. We converted five tons of pig iron at one charge, and having granulated it by pouring the molten steel into a cistern of water, we had this quantity of shotted metal in a condition that was still practically fluid as far as the power of mixing was concerned. If each granule weighed, on an average, seven grains, we had in our 50 lb. crucible 50,000 separate pieces, the precise degree of carburation of which had been ascertained by careful quantitative analysis of the whole five tons, which analysis we could afford to make -- and did make -- very carefully.

We produced, as nearly as practicable, three qualities of converted metal, say A, with half per cent. of carbon, B, with one per cent, and C, with one and a-half per cent.; we also made pure iron upon which we could absolutely rely. These four qualities, accurately analysed, were kept in separate bins; the analyst who gave the order to the steel melter to make two or three tons of steel of any precise and predetermined degree of carburation would, say for example, weigh 41 1/4 lb. out of bin A, and put 8 3/4 lb. from bin B into it, thus making the 50 lb. charge, always using the nearest of the three qualities to the one required, and making it a little milder or a little more highly carburised as desired. Most minute differences could thus, at all times, be made with unerring certainty by the simple fusion in a crucible of two metals, the carburation of which had, in each case, been tested by careful analysis. The mixing of these accurately-ascertained qualities in definite weights while in the granulated state resulted in the production of a quality the exact mean of the known constituents of the two qualities mixed. It gave a more certain and a more accurate result than could possibly be obtained on the old system of crucible steel-making, where judgment by the eye took the place of accurate analysis and the weighing machine, as used in my system. Hence it was an undeniable fact that we could, and did, produce commercially crucible cast steel of great purity, and of any precise and predetermined degree of carburation, with greater accuracy than was obtained by the method employed to produce crucible steel in Sheffield.


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