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  2. Open-hearth furnace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open-hearth_furnace

    Open hearth furnace workers at the Zaporizhstal steel mill in Ukraine taking a steel sample, c. 2012 Tapping open-hearth furnace, VEB Rohrkombinat Riesa, East Germany, 1982. An open-hearth furnace or open hearth furnace is any of several kinds of industrial furnace in which excess carbon and other impurities are burnt out of pig iron to produce ...

  3. Youngstown Sheet and Tube - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Youngstown_Sheet_and_Tube

    This plant contained four blast furnaces, twelve open hearth furnaces, several blooming mills, two Bessemer converters, a slabbing mill, a butt-weld tube mill, a 79-inch (2,000 mm) hot strip mill, seamless tube mills, and 9-inch (230 mm) and 12-inch (300 mm) bar mills at the Struthers Works. The Brier Hill Works consisted of two blast furnaces ...

  4. Puddling (metallurgy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puddling_(metallurgy)

    The puddling furnace is a metalmaking technology used to create wrought iron or steel from the pig iron produced in a blast furnace. The furnace is constructed to pull the hot air over the iron without the fuel coming into direct contact with the iron, a system generally known as a reverberatory furnace or open hearth furnace. The major ...

  5. Crucible Industries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crucible_Industries

    Inside roof of an arc furnace, showing its three electrodes Tapping an open-hearth furnace, 1967 1913 Halcomb Steel Company advertisement. A number of steel companies have operated in Syracuse, maintaining Crucible's intellectual property and patents. [7] In 1870, William A. Sweet founded the Sweet Iron Works.

  6. History of the iron and steel industry in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_iron_and...

    In the 20th century, the US industry successively adopted the open hearth furnace, then the basic oxygen steelmaking process. Since the American industry peaked in the 1940s and 1950s, the US industry has shifted to small mini-mills and specialty mills, using iron and steel scrap as feedstock, rather than iron ore.

  7. Inland Steel Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inland_Steel_Company

    The company's fifth open hearth furnace had just been completed, and the daily production capacity of open hearth steel was 500 tons. [38] The "Madeline" blast furnace, with a rated capacity of 350 tons/day, was blown in on August 31, 1907. [39] A blast furnace heats iron ore, limestone, and coke to a temperature of at least 3000 degrees ...

  8. Talk:Open-hearth furnace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Open-hearth_furnace

    Ancient Chinese, Egyptians, and others operated furnaces which created temperatures high enough to allow the production of iron and steel. Putting the Siemens regenerative furnace into the same article with older furnaces is comparable to including the Indianapolis 500 in the same article with chariot racing.

  9. Carnegie Steel Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnegie_Steel_Company

    Carnegie Steel made major technological innovations in the 1880s, especially the installation of the open hearth furnace system at Homestead in 1886. It now became possible to make steel suitable for structural beams and, with the advanced work of George Lauder in arms and armament, for armor plate for the US Navy and the militaries of other ...

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