Conference Proceedings
The AusIMM Proceedings 1951
Conference Proceedings
The AusIMM Proceedings 1951
The Manufacture of Hot and Cold Finished Seamless and Welded Steel Tubing
Although the terms "pipe" and "tube" are normally considered synonymous, a distinction is often drawn, the former term being applied to the hot finished product and the latter to cold finished material. It is, considered that the title of this paper includes hot finished seamless, and continuous-weld pipe, cold drawn seamless tubing, and electrically welded tubing.The continuous-weld process will be reviewed first, passing to the various methods of seamless manufacturing, which, in addition to meeting the demand for hot finished seamless pipe, also supply the raw material for cold drawn tubing, the manufacture of which will then be described. Finally the electric resistance-weld process will be Considered, and the paper will conclude with a brief review of the processes described and trends in present-day manufacture.CONTINUOUS-WELD PIPEThe raw material for this process is delivered in the form of coiled, hot finished, strip steel, generally referred to as "skelp". The end of one coil is electrically buttwelded to that of'the next, so forming an unbroken strip. This continuous ribbon of 'steel is fed into a skelp heating furnace, and brought to the correct temperature for the forming and welding operations which follow. This temperature is usually about 1,350C.The heated skelp issues from the furnace into 'a multistand mill, in which the first pair of rolls is designed to form the skelp into tubular shape, the edges being in close proximity to, but not touching each' other. These edges...
Contributor(s):
J Porteous, P L Cotton
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- Published: 1950
- PDF Size: 0.71 Mb.
- Unique ID: P_PROC1951_0708