US2180089A - Furnace - Google Patents

Furnace Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2180089A
US2180089A US233829A US23382938A US2180089A US 2180089 A US2180089 A US 2180089A US 233829 A US233829 A US 233829A US 23382938 A US23382938 A US 23382938A US 2180089 A US2180089 A US 2180089A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
hearth
heating
chamber
rails
furnace
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US233829A
Inventor
George R Mcdermott
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Surface Combustion Corp
Original Assignee
Surface Combustion Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Surface Combustion Corp filed Critical Surface Combustion Corp
Priority to US233829A priority Critical patent/US2180089A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2180089A publication Critical patent/US2180089A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C21METALLURGY OF IRON
    • C21DMODIFYING THE PHYSICAL STRUCTURE OF FERROUS METALS; GENERAL DEVICES FOR HEAT TREATMENT OF FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS METALS OR ALLOYS; MAKING METAL MALLEABLE, e.g. BY DECARBURISATION OR TEMPERING
    • C21D9/00Heat treatment, e.g. annealing, hardening, quenching or tempering, adapted for particular articles; Furnaces therefor

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to improvements in industrial heating furnaces of the type embodying a track within the heating chamber t Whereon the work pieces are supported while being progressed or pushed toward the work-discharge end of the furnace.
  • Furnaces of this type are commonly employed for heating billets, slabs, blooms and the like, preparatory to rolling. It is common practice in furnaces of this type to provide a soaking hearth whereon the work pieces are allowed to soak to equalize the temperature and to iron out the shadows or relatively cool spots resulting from the relatively cool rails of the aforesaid track. If the shadows are not thoroughly ironed out before the Work piece is fed to the rolls, there is great danger vof the rolls being broken and diiliculty in making the gauge or size. The importance of removing the shadows on the work piece will therefore be readily appreciated.
  • the present invention aims to provide in the hearth itself as many longitudinally extending hot spots as there arerails in thetrack on which the work pieces travel to reach the hearth to the end thatthe shadows caused bythe relatively cool rails may be' rapidly ironed out as the piece moves along thel hearth toward the work-discharge end of the furnace. Another object is to provide a simple and practical'way for producing said hot spots. Other objects and novel features will more fully appear from the detail description taken in connection with the accompanying drawings wherein the preferred form of. the invention is shown.
  • Fig. 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of a portion of a furnace embodying the present invention
  • p Fig. 2 is a vertical transverse sectional view of the furnace, the left-hand half of the view being taken on line 2-,2 of Fig. 1 and the right-hand half being taken on line ZA-ZA of lig. ⁇ 1.
  • furnaces having a principal heating chamber 3 and a soaking chamber I3, the two chambers being in open communication by way of a relatively restricted passage 5 through which the work pieces pass from the heating chamber 3 to the soaking chamber
  • the work pieces are usually progressed through the principal heating chamber 3 on elevated tracks comprising water cooled rails or skids t supported from below on appropriate pedestals l, the rails terminating at the front end of a soaking hearth 8 onto which the already heated work pieces are received forv soaking, this soaking including the elimination of the shadows or relatively coolspots on the work pieces where they have rested on the rails 6.
  • Heat is produced in the chamber 3 by appropriately located burners of which one set is indicated at 9. It is also customary to supply heat to the soaking chamber 4 as by burners III. After the work pieces have remained on the hearth 3 for an appropriate length of time, they are pushed down the incline II to the discharge opening which is normally kept closed by an outwardly swingable door I2.
  • the furnace thus far described is more or less conventional in the art and constitutes, as it were, the environment where the present invention, presently to be described, has special utility.
  • said hot spots are produced by embedding in the hearth 8 as many heating flues I3 as there are skid rails 6, the ilues being arranged lengthwise of the hearth in the same vertical plane as the rails E with the result that said hot spots are in longitudinal alinement with the said rails.
  • a downcomer I4 At the discharge end of each heating flue is a downcomer I4 which delivers to a transversely extending manifold I5 common to all of said flues, the manifold being connected by a. conduit I3 to a source of draft I'I which will ordinarily be the same smoke stack asthat'to which waste gases from the furnace are delivered by a waste gas conduit I8 leading from a point not shown but usually from a recuperator.
  • a damper I9 In each downcomer is a damper I9 and in the conduit I6 is a damper 29, the purpose of these dampers being to permit regulation of the draft in the heating ues I3.
  • Heating gases are drawn into the heating ues I3 at their inlet ends 2t from a source of supply provided by a plurality of burners 22 which re into the main heating chamber from. a level below said inlet ends 2i, it being noted that said burners fire in a generally upward direction.
  • the volume of heating gases drawn into the ues will, of course; depend on the setting of the dampers I9 and 20 as will be readily appreciated.
  • the present invention provides a relatively simple way of positively supplying heat to the hearth to compensate for the cold spots4 on the steel passing from the tracks to the hearth. It is worthy of note that by providing special heating flues in the hearth not only is it assured that the steel will be uniformly heated before re-A moval from the furnace, but the hearth need not be made as long as would ordinarily be the case in the absence of the heating ilues.- This saving in the length of hearth materially reduces the capital cost of the furnace itself. Moreoverv the heating ilues also compensate for radiation losses through the bottom of the hearth. Other advantages of the present invention will readily appear to those skilled in the art. It is to be understood that various changes may be made in details of construction within the scope of the appended claims.
  • a heating chamber having a soaking hearth at one end thereof, means for delivering heated work pieces to said hearth comprising laterally spaced rails in said chamber, a plurality of burners firing into said chamber below said rails adjacent that end of the hearth which faces said rails, and means for utilizing some of the hot gases produced by said burners for producing longitudinally extending hot spots in said hearth.
  • the last-named means comprising flues extending through said hearth longitudinally thereof, and means for inducing said hot gases to flow through said ues.
  • a main heating chamber and a soaking chamber separated from each other by a relatively restricted passage through which work pieces may be passed from the main heating chamber to the soaking chamber, skid rails in the main heating chamber for supporting the work pieces during their progress therethrough, a hearthlinsaid soaking chamber on which the work pieces rest after leaving said main heating chamber, a burner ring into said soaking chamber for heating said hearth, and longitudinally extending heating flues embedded in said hearth in longitudinal alinement with the skid rails for producing longitudinally extending hot spots in said hearth to compensate for the relatively cold spots on the work pieces where they have rested on the relatively cool skid rails.

Description

Nov. 14, 1939. G, R, MCDERMOTT 2,180,089'.
' FURNAGE Filed oct. 7, 1938 2 sheets-Sheet 2 Cttorneg Patented Nov. 14, i939 PATENT OFFICE FURNACE George R. McDermott, Toledo, Ohio, assignor to Surface Combustion Corporation, Toledo, Ohio, a corporation of New York Application October '7,y 1938, Serial No. 233,829l
Claims.
The present invention relates to improvements in industrial heating furnaces of the type embodying a track within the heating chamber t Whereon the work pieces are supported while being progressed or pushed toward the work-discharge end of the furnace. Furnaces of this type are commonly employed for heating billets, slabs, blooms and the like, preparatory to rolling. It is common practice in furnaces of this type to provide a soaking hearth whereon the work pieces are allowed to soak to equalize the temperature and to iron out the shadows or relatively cool spots resulting from the relatively cool rails of the aforesaid track. If the shadows are not thoroughly ironed out before the Work piece is fed to the rolls, there is great danger vof the rolls being broken and diiliculty in making the gauge or size. The importance of removing the shadows on the work piece will therefore be readily appreciated.
The present invention aims to provide in the hearth itself as many longitudinally extending hot spots as there arerails in thetrack on which the work pieces travel to reach the hearth to the end thatthe shadows caused bythe relatively cool rails may be' rapidly ironed out as the piece moves along thel hearth toward the work-discharge end of the furnace. Another object is to provide a simple and practical'way for producing said hot spots. Other objects and novel features will more fully appear from the detail description taken in connection with the accompanying drawings wherein the preferred form of. the invention is shown.
In the drawings,
Fig. 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of a portion of a furnace embodying the present invention, and p Fig. 2 is a vertical transverse sectional view of the furnace, the left-hand half of the view being taken on line 2-,2 of Fig. 1 and the right-hand half being taken on line ZA-ZA of lig.` 1.
In the drawings there is shown a furnace having a principal heating chamber 3 and a soaking chamber I3, the two chambers being in open communication by way of a relatively restricted passage 5 through which the work pieces pass from the heating chamber 3 to the soaking chamber In furnaces of this type the work pieces are usually progressed through the principal heating chamber 3 on elevated tracks comprising water cooled rails or skids t supported from below on appropriate pedestals l, the rails terminating at the front end of a soaking hearth 8 onto which the already heated work pieces are received forv soaking, this soaking including the elimination of the shadows or relatively coolspots on the work pieces where they have rested on the rails 6.
Heat is produced in the chamber 3 by appropriately located burners of which one set is indicated at 9. It is also customary to supply heat to the soaking chamber 4 as by burners III. After the work pieces have remained on the hearth 3 for an appropriate length of time, they are pushed down the incline II to the discharge opening which is normally kept closed by an outwardly swingable door I2. The furnace thus far described is more or less conventional in the art and constitutes, as it were, the environment where the present invention, presently to be described, has special utility.
As already indicated, it is one of the objects of the present invention to provide in the hearth 8 as many longitudinally extending hot spots as there are skid rails 6 to the end that the shadows or relatively cool spots in the work pieces .where they have rested on the skid rails may be removed more quickly and uniformly than has heretofore been possible and the preferred means for accomplishing that result will now be described.
In accordance with the present invention, said hot spots are produced by embedding in the hearth 8 as many heating flues I3 as there are skid rails 6, the ilues being arranged lengthwise of the hearth in the same vertical plane as the rails E with the result that said hot spots are in longitudinal alinement with the said rails. At the discharge end of each heating flue is a downcomer I4 which delivers to a transversely extending manifold I5 common to all of said flues, the manifold being connected by a. conduit I3 to a source of draft I'I which will ordinarily be the same smoke stack asthat'to which waste gases from the furnace are delivered by a waste gas conduit I8 leading from a point not shown but usually from a recuperator. In each downcomer is a damper I9 and in the conduit I6 is a damper 29, the purpose of these dampers being to permit regulation of the draft in the heating ues I3.
Heating gases are drawn into the heating ues I3 at their inlet ends 2t from a source of supply provided by a plurality of burners 22 which re into the main heating chamber from. a level below said inlet ends 2i, it being noted that said burners fire in a generally upward direction. The volume of heating gases drawn into the ues will, of course; depend on the setting of the dampers I9 and 20 as will be readily appreciated. By arranging the burners 22 to fire into the chamber 3 rather than directly into the ues I3, they also serve to provide heat inthe lower portion 55 of the chamber 3 with resultant better heating of the work pieces approaching the hearth 8 as will be readily appreciated.
From the foregoing description it will be seen that the present invention provides a relatively simple way of positively supplying heat to the hearth to compensate for the cold spots4 on the steel passing from the tracks to the hearth. It is worthy of note that by providing special heating flues in the hearth not only is it assured that the steel will be uniformly heated before re-A moval from the furnace, but the hearth need not be made as long as would ordinarily be the case in the absence of the heating ilues.- This saving in the length of hearth materially reduces the capital cost of the furnace itself. Moreoverv the heating ilues also compensate for radiation losses through the bottom of the hearth. Other advantages of the present invention will readily appear to those skilled in the art. It is to be understood that various changes may be made in details of construction within the scope of the appended claims.
What I claim is:
l. In a furnace, the combination with a heatling chamber having a hearth at one end thereof and a plurality of rails forming a track along which work pieces travel to reach said hearth,
of means for producing a longitudinally extend.
in said hearth in line with said rails comprising a heating ue embedded in said hearth, and means for causing heating gases to flow through said ue in the same direction as the travel of the work pieces toward said hearth. Y
3. In a furnace, the combination of a heating chamber having a soaking hearth at one end thereof, means for delivering heated work pieces to said hearth comprising laterally spaced rails in said chamber, a plurality of burners firing into said chamber below said rails adjacent that end of the hearth which faces said rails, and means for utilizing some of the hot gases produced by said burners for producing longitudinally extending hot spots in said hearth.
4. In the combination specified in claim 3, the last-named means comprising flues extending through said hearth longitudinally thereof, and means for inducing said hot gases to flow through said ues.
' 5. In a furnace, the combination of a main heating chamber and a soaking chamber separated from each other by a relatively restricted passage through which work pieces may be passed from the main heating chamber to the soaking chamber, skid rails in the main heating chamber for supporting the work pieces during their progress therethrough, a hearthlinsaid soaking chamber on which the work pieces rest after leaving said main heating chamber, a burner ring into said soaking chamber for heating said hearth, and longitudinally extending heating flues embedded in said hearth in longitudinal alinement with the skid rails for producing longitudinally extending hot spots in said hearth to compensate for the relatively cold spots on the work pieces where they have rested on the relatively cool skid rails.
GEORGE R. MCDERMO'IT.
US233829A 1938-10-07 1938-10-07 Furnace Expired - Lifetime US2180089A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US233829A US2180089A (en) 1938-10-07 1938-10-07 Furnace

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US233829A US2180089A (en) 1938-10-07 1938-10-07 Furnace

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2180089A true US2180089A (en) 1939-11-14

Family

ID=22878849

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US233829A Expired - Lifetime US2180089A (en) 1938-10-07 1938-10-07 Furnace

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2180089A (en)

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2450087A (en) * 1944-04-27 1948-09-28 Fred N Hays Open-flame heated continuous furnace
US2534825A (en) * 1943-09-16 1950-12-19 Levi S Longenecker Smelting furnace
US2689119A (en) * 1952-01-11 1954-09-14 United States Steel Corp Continuous heating furnace
US3081073A (en) * 1960-05-31 1963-03-12 Bloom Eng Co Inc Metal heating furnace apparatus
US3100811A (en) * 1960-05-31 1963-08-13 Frederick S Bloom Metal heating furnace
US3156453A (en) * 1961-03-20 1964-11-10 Inland Steel Co Heating furnace
US3342468A (en) * 1964-06-30 1967-09-19 United States Steel Corp Apparatus for removing cold skid marks from objects
US3463863A (en) * 1965-12-17 1969-08-26 Didier Werke Ag Heating device for the equalizing hearth of a pusher-type furnace with cooled slide bars

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2534825A (en) * 1943-09-16 1950-12-19 Levi S Longenecker Smelting furnace
US2450087A (en) * 1944-04-27 1948-09-28 Fred N Hays Open-flame heated continuous furnace
US2689119A (en) * 1952-01-11 1954-09-14 United States Steel Corp Continuous heating furnace
US3081073A (en) * 1960-05-31 1963-03-12 Bloom Eng Co Inc Metal heating furnace apparatus
US3100811A (en) * 1960-05-31 1963-08-13 Frederick S Bloom Metal heating furnace
US3156453A (en) * 1961-03-20 1964-11-10 Inland Steel Co Heating furnace
US3342468A (en) * 1964-06-30 1967-09-19 United States Steel Corp Apparatus for removing cold skid marks from objects
US3463863A (en) * 1965-12-17 1969-08-26 Didier Werke Ag Heating device for the equalizing hearth of a pusher-type furnace with cooled slide bars

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2180089A (en) Furnace
US2298149A (en) Continuous heating furnace
CN104561515B (en) Continuous way bar plate heating stove and heating means thereof
GB1254360A (en) Improvements in continuous heating furnaces
US3342468A (en) Apparatus for removing cold skid marks from objects
US1912933A (en) Heating furnace
US2776128A (en) Forge furnace
US2078747A (en) Process of and apparatus for operating cupolas
US2133673A (en) Continuous heating furnace
US3081073A (en) Metal heating furnace apparatus
US2157221A (en) Continuous heating furnace
US2351661A (en) Regenerative soaking pit furnace
US2056904A (en) Continuous furnace
US2652240A (en) Skid rail structure for forge furnaces
US2780453A (en) Continuous furnace for heating slabs or the like
GB357575A (en) Improvements in or relating to a method of and means for the heat treatment of metal
US2167596A (en) Process and apparatus for operating a primary furnace
US2430477A (en) Method and apparatus for heating steel
US2591283A (en) Radiant work heating gas burner
US2480374A (en) Furnace
US3212763A (en) Reheating furnace
GB1021872A (en) High temperature heating of metals
US2126272A (en) Open hearth furnace
US2196321A (en) Regenerative soaking pit furnace
US1944729A (en) Continuous furnace