Mining for Souls

Page 50a =75
Blue Gray Line
 Standish Furnace page 5
 ........trough made in the shape of the old sand runner and dam.  Just in front of the dam are slots cast in the side of the trough to receive the skimmer. A depression in one side of the trough in front of the skimmer allows for the overflow of the skimmed slag. An outlet in the side of the trough, between the skimmer and the dam is provided for draining the iron after the cast. The trough is deep and wide and is able to care for sudden rushes of iron and slag. The slag was handled in slags ladles. These were a cast steel moulded ladle mounted to a railroad car truclt similar to the one used for the iron ladle.  It may be tipped to either side by means of an air cylinder coupled to the train air line. There was also a ladle that would dump off the end for extending the dump. When the slag was being dumped, it could be seen for miles. From 1886 until 1903 the method of closing the tapping hole was by means of balls of clay which were thrown into the hole and then rammed back with a stopping hook. For this operation, the blast had to be taken completely off, for several minutes and even then the clay plug extended only a short distance into the furnace and breakout at the furnace was common. In 1903 a clay gun was installed.  This device consisted of two steam cylinders in tandem, whose pistons are joined by a single piston rod.  The rear cylinder is a double acting steam cylinder, and the front has an opening in the back for loading the clay and the forward end is attached to a nozzle which extends into the tapping hole and through which the clay iq forced. The gun was hung off a bracket attached to the furnace column, and was swung in by hand. While this method of closing the hole was an improvement over the old way, and eliminated the possibility of breakout, still it necessitated taking off the blast before the men could engage the gun. Also there was always some danger of the wet clay coming in contact with a pool of molten iron causing a small explosion and sometimes burning the men. When the iron flows from the furnace evenly and it is usual to allow the blast to coninue.  If the iron comes more rapidly, then it can be handled but the blast must be slackened to lessen the pressure on the molten materials.  When the flow is nearly completed, the blast is put on again in order that the additional pressure on the surface of the fluids in the hearth will compel more of it to flow from the furnace.  When the furnace is drained as much as is practicable, the tapping hole is closed. When the closing of the tapping hole is completed, the blast is put on full and the smelting proceeds. Iron and cinder accumulate in the hearth.  After about two hours the cinder rises again to the tuyeres and must be flushed. This is accomplished by simply drawing the plug from the cinder notch and allowing the cinder to run until it is drained to the level of the notch. When the furnace has been filled and starts on its career of reduction and melting, it tends to empty itself rapidly as the stock sinks. Constant vigilance must be exerted to keep a full column of materials. Proper filling and distributing of the stock are of vital importance. Since the furnace charges must be determined before hand and used in the proportions thus predetermined, it is necessary that the different kinds of stock should be carefully weighed. The bases of the furnace charge is the weight of fuel in each ~~round". A round consisted of six skips. Three skips of coke and two of ore and one of stone. The proportions of ore and stone,a~cuf 55'


Sources:
Adirondack Museum photos, Blue Mountain Lake, NY;
History of Clinton County, New York;
from History of Mining of Chateaugay Ore and Iron Company.

Go to Page 1 of The History of Lyon Mountain.
Go to Page 3 of The History of Lyon Mountain.
Go to Mining History for The History of Mining in the North Country.
Go to Page 5 of The History of Lyon Mountain.(for article on Lyon Mt. and Mineville)


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Blue Gray Line
Rod Bigelow
Box 13  Chazy Lake
Dannemora, N.Y. 12929
  rodbigelow@netzero.net
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