喜报 | 新研4T真空感应熔炼炉顺利投产
4月27日11点58分,上海新研工业设备股份有限公司VIM 4T真空感应熔炼炉在圆满通过调试之后,顺利完成26炉钢,一个炉次的热试。项目于去年8月中旬启动,于今年1月中旬开始发货安装。为能保障客户尽早使用,工程师同安装队在春节期间加班加点、全力以赴,在最短的时间内完成了整套设备的安装。
各专业同事紧密配合,把整个冷调试过程缩短至19天时间,为客户赢得了时间。历经多重考验,电源系统、真空系统等均顺利通过各项考核,其各项指标都达到或优于设计水平。这一结果也标志着VIM 4T真空感应熔炼炉正式投产运行。
VIM 4T真空感应熔炼炉在设计上具有很多优势:一个标准的炉子型号 VIM-400,设计可连接3、4吨的炉体,这台 VIM 炉配置了一个 4 吨炉体;多个腔室设计,包括熔炼室、上加料室、铸锭室及热流槽插入室等,在各腔室之间都设置隔离阀,实现操作的灵活性,整个生产阶段,从原材料的装料至浇铸工序,都会在真空或控制气压下进行,连续运行生产提高了生产效率,纵向安装流槽实现了更好的最终产品清洁度及收得率;整体结构坚固牢靠,主要钢结构全部采用水冷,整齐合理的设备布局,有助于客户现场的工艺实施和管理,较大限度地降低总高度、最大限度地减小设备的占地面积,整机设备检修维护方便;新研自主研发的高效IGBT电源,电磁搅拌、惰性气体冲洗、自动频率控制和自动化工艺控制系统均为可选用的设备特性,为目前现代化的配置定义;坩锅的预热可以在真空下进行,这样可得到更少的出气率和更高的真空度;先进的安全系统包括了紧急破空阀和紧急吹氩装置;模块化的设计概念可结合不同的浇铸选项;通过视频可实现远程操作。
新研的4T真空感應爐代表了新一代基于传统的 VIM 技术下连续生产超纯金属和合金的熔炼炉,安全高效、环保智慧、经济便捷!
"Excuse me," Arthur ventured, huskily, "did you wish to speak to me?" "What!" Balmayne cried, "were you mad enough to----." seventeen Christmas presents? I'm a Socialist, please remember; And to close the procession came more soldiers. For that fog the seaplane was making at full speed. It was no wonder that Spain, feeling the serious effects of this state of things, should resist it; and when she did so, and exerted an unusual degree of vigilance, then the most terrible outcries were raised, and wonderful stories were circulated of Spanish cruelties to our people beyond the Atlantic. At this time the Opposition got hold of one of these, and made the House of Commons and the nation resound with it. It was, that one Captain Robert Jenkins, who had been master of a sloop trading from Jamaica, had been boarded and searched by a Coastguard, and treated in a most barbarous manner, though they could detect no proof of smuggling in his vessel. He said that the Spanish captain had cut off one of his ears, bidding him carry it to his king, and tell his Majesty that if he were present he would treat him in the same manner. This story was now seven years old, but it was not the less warmly received on that account. It excited the utmost horror, and Jenkins was ordered to appear at the bar of the House of Commons on the 16th of March, to give an account of the outrage himself; and it would appear that both he and other witnesses were examined the same day. Jenkins carried his ear about with him wrapped in cotton, to show to those to whom he related the fact, and the indignation was intense. He was asked by a member how he felt when he found himself in the hands of such barbarians, and he replied, "I recommended my soul to God, and my cause to my country." The worthy skipper had probably been crammed with this dramatic sentiment by some of his clever Parliamentary introducers; but its effect was all the same as if it had been a genuine and involuntary expression of his own mind. Researches made at the Admiralty in 1889 proved that he really had lost an ear. Nevertheless, the whole army was dead beat and in the most deplorable condition when they entered Carlisle on the morning of the 19th. As the enemy did not appear, they rested that day and the following night, when they set forward again, leaving a fresh garrison. Cumberland was soon up before the walls, and they fired vigorously at him; but he sent off to Whitehaven and brought up six eighteen-pounders, with which, to their dismay, he began to play on their crumbling walls on the 29th. Next morning they hung out a white flag, and offered to capitulate; but Cumberland would hear of no terms except their surrendering on condition that they should not be put to the sword. At three o'clock in the afternoon both town and castle were surrendered, the garrison being shut up in the cathedral, and a guard set upon them. On the 3rd of January the Duke of Cumberland left the command to General Hawley, and hastened back to London, being summoned to defend the southern coast from a menaced landing of the French. In pursuance of this plan of the campaign, Prideaux and Johnson arrived before the fort of Niagara in the middle of July, which they found very strong, and garrisoned by six hundred men. Prideaux was soon killed by the bursting of a shell, but Johnson continued the siege with great ability, having to invest the fort on one hand, whilst he was menaced on the other by a mixed body of French and Indians, one thousand seven hundred in number, who came to relieve the fort. The attack upon him commenced with a terrible war-whoop of the Indians, which, mingling with the roar of the great cataract near, made the most horrible din imaginable. But this did not disconcert the English and their savage allies, who received them with such steady courage, that in less than an hour they were put to the rout in sight of their own garrison, and pursued for five miles with dreadful slaughter. The garrison thereupon capitulated, remaining prisoners of war. There, however, Sir William Johnson's career stopped. From various causes, not foreseen, he was not able to advance beyond the Ontario to unite with Amherst. That general had fully succeeded in taking Ticonderoga and Crown Point, but he found the French so strongly posted on an island at the upper end of Lake Champlain, that he was compelled to stop and build[134] boats to enable his army to reach and dislodge them; and it was not till October that he was ready to proceed, when he was driven back repeatedly by tempests, and compelled to go into winter quarters. "Some of you find Lieut. Bowersox, and bring him here," said Capt. McGillicuddy, sitting up, and beginning to twist a handkerchief around his thigh, to form a tourniquet. "Lieutenant, you all right?" The old man mounted into the seat, gathered up the rope lines, and chirruped to the horse to start. He hitched forward cautiously a little farther, to where he could peer through the bushes, being exceedingly wary not to repeat his opponent's mistake, and set their tops in motion. A rock protruding through the ground in front of him made an opening through which he could see, and also afforded a rest for his musket. He looked sharply, and at length was rewarded by seeing the gun-barrel come out by the side of the barked willow, rested on a bare limb, and apparently aimed at the hill beyond. He took a long breath to steady his nerves, stretched out his legs to make himself more at ease, pushed his musket forward until he got exactly the right poise, aimed about nine inches below the level of his opponent's gun-barrel, and a little to the left, drew his bead down to a hair's nicety in the hind sight, and pulled the trigger just as the rebel sharpshooter did the same. Both muskets seemed to flash at the same moment. The rebel sprang up through the willows and fell forward on his face. There was a vague hint that he had seen the face somewhere, but he dismissed it, then settled himself, and, busy with his own thoughts, pressed his face against the window, and tried to recognize through the darkness the objects by which they were rushing. They were all deeply interesting to him, for they were part of Maria's home and surroundings. After awhile the man appeared temporarily tired of billing and cooing, and thought conversation with some one else would give variety to the trip. He opened their lunch-basket, took out something for himself and his companion to eat, nudged Shorty, and offered him a generous handful. Shorty promptly accepted, for he had the perennial hunger of convalescence, and his supper had been interrupted. It was their regiment—the 200th Ind.; it was made up of the same companies, with the great majority of the men the same, but it was very far from being the 200th Ind. which crossed the Ohio River in September, 1862. "I should say he had a mighty strong breath, Monty," Shorty interrupted. He liked to break in on Monty's heroics. "Excuse me from havin' a 12pounder breathin' around me." "Yes, but d?an't m?ake him angry—he might beat you." "I used to be in the fancy," said the minister, "but five years ago the Lord challenged me, and knocked me out in the first round." "We shall talk further," said Holgrave: "in the mean time, we must consult for your own safety. If your father was a villein of this barony, it is not likely that the old steward, or the new one—the fiend Calverley—should forget you; and——"
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