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Iron Giant One of America’s great machines comes back to life.
http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1969/12/iron-giant/8886/Library of Congress
Approaching Alcoas 50,000-ton forging press feels a bit like approaching an alp: it starts out incomprehensibly huge and keeps getting incomprehensibly huger. From a distance, the thing dominates the horizon of the hangar-like Cleveland Works facility; as you get nearer, catching glimpses through forests of girders and around cliffs of firebrick, it begins to dominate the air above. But even as you stand at its foot, being told that the eight steel bolts anchoring it are 40 inches thick, calculating in your head that that makes them 10 feet aroundeven then its still a bit out of reach. Only when you climb it, peer down from its sixth-floor summit, and realize that the puny machine next to it is, in fact, its 35,000-ton brotherwell, then you finally appreciate the size of the thing. Its big.
The Fifty, as its known in company shorthand, broke down three years ago, and there was talk of retiring it for good. Instead, it was overhauled and is scheduled to resume service early this year. One of the great machines of American industry has been reborn.
A forging press isbegging the forgiveness of the engineering godsessentially a waffle iron for metal. An ingot, usually heated to increase its malleability, is placed on the lower of a pair of dies. The upper die is then gradually forced down against the ingot, and the metal flows to fill both dies and form the intended shape. In this way, extremely complex structures can be created quickly and with minimal waste.
What sets the Fifty apart is its extraordinary scale. Its 14 major structural components, cast in ductile iron, weigh as much as 250 tons each; those yard-thick steel bolts are also 78 feet long; all told, the machine weighs 16 million pounds, and when activated its eight main hydraulic cylinders deliver up to 50,000 tons of compressive force. If the logistics could somehow be worked out, the Fifty could bench-press the battleship Iowa, with 860 tons to spare.
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Iron Giant One of America’s great machines comes back to life. (Original Post)
xchrom
Feb 2012
OP
denbot
(9,901 posts)1. Great news.
We used to make most if not all of the steel we consumed. Domestic steel bodes well for domestic manufacturing.
4_TN_TITANS
(2,977 posts)2. As a former press operator, I thought our 500 ton press was a monster.
It shook the building and could be heard for some distance with the overhead doors open. Even after running similar equipment, I can't wrap my head around a 50,000 ton. What kind of base could you bolt it to that wouldn't shatter from the impact? Is it bolted into bedrock?