"No soup for you!" - Yev Kassem (from Seinfeld)
QUOTE: Originally posted by Junctionfan Somebody told me that they use Hydroflouric Acid to pickle steel as well. Is that true?
QUOTE: Originally posted by DPD1 QUOTE: Originally posted by dphusman Someone will have to correct me if I am wrong here, but I have a DVD that shows some Iowa Interstate trains with a few coil cars in them. I wonder if these coil cars might be going to Maytag to use for the production of new washers and dryers. Yes, I know that at least some of the coils come from USS Gary on the EJ&E, then come onto the Iowa at Joliet. A very large portion of coil traffic is actually not going to the end user, but to another plant for further processing. The BNSF Steel Trains are often an example of this, like the JOLPIT that goes to POSCO in California for further processing. There's also simple single spur trackside rail to truck places that some coil loads can go to. There's one here in the L.A. Harbor that is served by the PHL. It's nothing more then a short spur next to a gravel lot where heavy-duty forklifts take the coils off the gons or open coil cars, and transfer it to trucks. I've seen similar places that can handle hooded cars with a crane. Also near that location is a similar business that has a small warehouse. That place gets the hooded cars from many roads, including NS, EJ&E, Indiana Harbor, and others. Los Angeles, CA -Rail Radio Online-Home of the "TrainTenna" RR Monitoring Antenna- http://eje.railfan.net/railradioonline -The Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Photo Archive & E-Mail List- http://eje.railfan.net
QUOTE: Originally posted by dphusman Someone will have to correct me if I am wrong here, but I have a DVD that shows some Iowa Interstate trains with a few coil cars in them. I wonder if these coil cars might be going to Maytag to use for the production of new washers and dryers.
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QUOTE: Originally posted by rtubbesing261 I work for a metals distributor. Many of our facilities receive coil cars into our warehouse. We then cut, slit, polish, level the coils into pieces for our customers. (No fabrication) Our Customers then take the material and make things out of the metal. (like stainless meat slicers, Electrical junction boxes, truck bodies... and many other procducts ... way too numerous to mention) Thankyou 2B
QUOTE: Originally posted by M.W. Hemphill Band steel (which is usually coiled for shipment) emerges from the primary steel mill as hot-rolled band, and is either rolled again in a cold-rolling mill to improve its surface properties, strength, and hardness, or consumed. Products that hot-rolled band makes include tanks, silos, corrugated galvanized roofing sheets, highway guardrails, truck bumpers, farm machinery, car stereo speaker brackets, bed frames, shelf brackets -- basically anything that is stamped, rolled into shapes, bent, or curved -- in which a glass-smooth, blemish-free surface finish is not required. If surface finish is important, hot-rolled band is rerolled in a cold-rolling mill, which also gives the steel toughness, hardness, and strength. Products made from cold-rolled steel include auto body panels, home appliance shells, cans (after tinplating), file cabinets and desks -- anything that will be required to have a smooth finish, and anything that has to be both thin AND strong. Cold-band is much more expensive than hot-band because there's so much more processing involved, plus a lot of the input material is spoiled. A washing machine uses both hot-band and cold-band steel: the shell uses cold band to give it strength and a slick finish; all the brackets inside that hold the motor and pump and controls are hot-band, or are made from the trimmings from the cold-band. To some degree you can determine what a coil will be used for, and where it came from and where it's going, by the type of car it's loaded into and where you see it. Hot-band is shipped in open coil cars if it's still hot or if it's finish properties aren't important -- either the user is making something like steel tanks, or will pickle it (dip it in sulfuric acid) before doing something with it. Cold band is wrapped in paper or shipped in covered cars, or both. Most of the cold-rolling mills are concentrated in a crescent around the Great Lakes from Chicago to Hamilton, Ont., dipping down to Ashland, Ky., concentrated around the auto body stamping plants, their biggest customer by far. If you see an open coil steel car anywhere in this area carrying coils, it's hard to say if its destined to a cold-band mill or an end user of hot-band steel. Outside of this region, however, any coil steel you see is probably destined to a user, and if its an open car, its hot-band.
Being Crazy,keeps you from going "INSANE" !! "The light at the end of the tunnel,has been turned off due to budget cuts" NOT AFRAID A Vet., and PROUD OF IT!!
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