- Finery forge
Iron tapped from theblast furnace ispig iron , and contains significant amounts ofcarbon andsilicon . To produce malleablewrought iron , it needs to undergo a further process. In the early modern period, this was carried out in a finery forge.There were several types of finery forges. The dominant type in
Sweden was the German forge, which had a singlehearth that was used for all processes. InUppland north ofStockholm and certain adjacent provinces, another kind known as the Walloon forge was used, mainly for the production of a particularly pure kind of iron known asoregrounds iron , which was exported to England to make blister steel. Its purity depended on the use of ore from the Dannemora mine. The Walloon forge was virtually the only kind used inGreat Britain . This had two kinds of hearth, the finery and thechafery . In the finery, the finer remeltedpig iron so as to oxidise the carbon (and silicon). This produced a lump of iron (with someslag ) known as a bloom. This was consolidated using a water-powered hammer (seetrip hammer ) and returned to the finery. The next stages were undertaken by the hammerman. His work was to draw the bloom out into a bar to produce what was known asbar iron . In the course of doing so, he had to reheat the iron, for which he used the chafery. The fuel in the finery had to becharcoal , because impurities in any mineral fuel would affect the quality of the iron.This is an obsolete process of making iron. The finery forge process began to be replaced from the late 18th century by others, of which puddling was the most successful. These used mineral fuel (
coal or coke), and freed the iron industry from its dependence on the speed of growth of trees. That transition is theindustrial revolution for theiron industry .ee also
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Puddling furnace References
*H. Schubert, "History of British Iron and Steel Industry c.450 BC to AD 1775" (1957), 272–291.
*A. den Ouden, "The Production of Wrought Iron in Finery Hearths", "Historical Metallurgy" 15(2) (1981), 63–87 and 16(1) (1982), 29–33.
*K-G. Hildebrand, "Swedish Iron in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries: Export Industry Before Industrialization" (Stockholm 1992).
*P. King, 'The Cartel in Oregrounds Iron: Trading in the Raw Material for Steel During the 18th century", "Journal of Industrial History" 6 (2003), 25–48.
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