Читать книгу Lead Smelting and Refining, With Some Notes on Lead Mining онлайн
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Two men work, in eight-hour shifts, at each of the furnaces, receiving 4.75 and 4.25c. respectively for every 100 lb. of lead produced. The ore is weighed out and heaped up in front of the furnaces; on the track near by the coke is wheeled up in a flat iron car with two compartments. The furnacemen are chiefly negroes. At the side of each furnace is a small stock of coal, which is used chiefly for maintaining a small fire under the lead kettle. Only small quantities of coal are added from time to time during the smelting operation.
Over each furnace is placed an iron hood, through which the fumes and gases escape. They pass first through a collecting pipe, extending through the whole works, to a 1500 ft. dust flue, measuring 10 × 10 ft., in internal cross-section. Near the middle of this is placed a fan of 100,000 cu. ft. capacity per minute, which forces the fumes and gases into the bag-house, where they are filtered through 1500 sacks of loosely woven cotton cloth, each 25 ft. long and 18 in. in diameter, and thence pass up a 150 ft. stack.