roof ridge line |
แนวสันหลังคา |
Acid Process 1 |
(english) A process of making steel, either Bessemer, open-hearth or electric, in which the furnace is lined with a siliceous refractory and for which low phosphorus pig iron is required as this element is not removed. |
Acid Process 2 |
(english) A steel making method using an acid refractory-lined (usually silica) furnace. Neither sulfur or phosphorus is removed. |
Acid-Process |
(english) A process of making steel, either Bessemer, open-hearth or electric, in which the furnace is lined with a siliceous refractory and for which low phosphorus pig iron is required as this element is not removed. |
Adeline Steelmaking Process |
(english) Method of producing a precision casting of steel or steel alloys using aluminolthermic process and lost wax, followed by centrifugal action. |
AIR BLEEDER AUTOMATIC |
(english) A valve that is fit into a hydraulic pipeline to facilitate automatic release of air trapped in the pipeline. See also AIR BLEEDER, MANUAL. |
Back End |
(english) 1) Usually refers to the entry end of process lines. 2) The outside lap 2) of the produced coil, or the inside lap of the consumed coil. |
Ball Burnishing |
(english) A method of obtaining a high luster on small parts by rotating them in a wooden-lined barrel with water, burnishing soap, and stainless steel shot. |
Band, Inside |
(english) A loose steel frame placed inside a removable flask to reinforce the sand at the parting line after the flask has been removed. |
Basic Oxygen Furnace (BOF) |
(english) "WHAT A pear-shaped furnace, lined with refractory bricks, that refines molten iron from the blast furnace and scrap into steel. Up to 30% of the charge into the BOF can be scrap, with hot metal accounting for the rest. WHY BOFs, which can refine a heat (batch) of steel in less than 45 minutes, replaced open-hearth furnaces in the 1950s; the latter required five to six hours to process the metal. The BOF's rapid operation, lower cost and ease of control give it a distinct advantage over previous methods. HOW Scrap is dumped into the furnace vessel, followed by the hot metal from the blast furnace. A lance is lowered from above, through which blows a high-pressure stream of oxygen to cause chemical reactions that separate impurities as fumes or slag. Once refined, the liquid steel and slag are poured into separate containers. " |