Читать книгу Lead Smelting and Refining, With Some Notes on Lead Mining онлайн

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The furnaces were run with a comparatively thin bed of coal on the grate, and combustion was very imperfect, the percentage of unburned carbon in the ash being commonly high. This was unavoidable with the method of firing employed and the inferior character of the coal (southern Illinois). The excessive consumption of coal was due largely, however, to the practice of raking out the entire bed of coal at the beginning of the operation of “firing down” (beginning the reaction period), when a fresh fire was built with cordwood and large lumps of coal.

Each furnace had two flues at the throat, 16 × 18 in. in size, each flue being provided with a separate damper. Each furnace had an iron chimney approximately 55 ft. high, of which 13 ft. was a brick pedestal (64 × 64 in.) and the remaining 42 ft. sheet steel, guyed. The chimneys were 42 in. in diameter. The distance from the outside end of the furnace to the chimney was approximately 6 ft., and there was consequently but little opportunity for flue dust to collect in the flue. About once a month, however, the chimney was opened at the base and about two wheelbarrows (say 600 lb.) of flue dust, assaying about 50 per cent. lead, was recovered per furnace.

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