#steelfactory #howitsmade #corporatevideo How Steel is Produce Steel Production Steel Making Process Iron Steel Factory Steel Plant Producing How it works From Start to Finish How it's Made
Just started two months ago at our local union steel mill in n.w Illinois. Very hot job, but very satisfying to see how billets are made and then rolled out. 36ft billets is what we make from scrap
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This was the end of melt shop production at the steel mill I worked in ! Either ship out the billet, or it would go be reheated at the mill, made into channel, angel, rebar, flats ect.... 👍✌
Ive got over 200 thousand into my foundry so far i should be able to start up in 5 months i should be pouring 180 tons of gun grade steel when completed
I would like to say thank you to the brave individuals who do this job but also the clever machinery who must get a lot of damage Also which music is being played in the back ground
What amazes me and i cant really get is how the heck the huuuuge furnaces were built. I mean... How did the metal was molten to assemble a BIG furnace that can melt another huge amount of metal. Hahah
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Around 2750 Celsius will melt iron and steel. dQ = m*c*dT; iron is roughly 0.45 J/(g*C). So... to bring one ton of iron from STP to 2750 C is... dQ = 1,000,000 g * 0.45 * (2750 - 25) = 1.23 e9 J. From there, the latent heat of fusion for iron is around 247 KJ/kg. Assuming you pay 12 cents per kWh, 1.23e9 J is roughly 342 kWh. At minimum that'll cost you around $41 in electricity to do at 100% efficiency. You won't get that efficiency. Double that estimate at least.
The higher the carbon content the lower the liquidous temp. Most furnaces tap at around 3000 fahrenheit, for structural steel grades, and the casters I have worked on casted with a goal superheat of anywhere between 40 and 50 degrees. Very interesting work.
@@gilian2587 the steel in this video starts to solidify at around 2750ish fahrenheit, not celcius. 2750 celcius is 4982 fahrenheit and there is no ferrous steel on planet earth that requires 4982 fahrenheit to become liquid. I have 15 years experience between working in the melt shop, where melting and casting occurs and, and working in the rolling mill where billets are rolled into finished product.
@@goatandyourmom9690 It looks like I screwed up in looking up the melting point of iron; mixing up Celsius and Fahrenheit is a pretty big goof; I appreciate you pointing it out. I'll revise my calculations shortly.
@@gilian2587 you're good friend. It's one of the few times in my life where I actually know what I'm talking about and that's only because I spent many years in the industry. If you have a steel mill near where you live it's a good way to have a 6 figure income without a college degree.