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All conveyors are equipped with the following safety switches:

 Safety Stop Switches


 Plug Chute Switches (by others)
 Belt Alignment Switches

tal Structure and Crystallization 3. Plastic Deformation 4. Annealing and Hot Working 5. Constitution of
Alloys 6. Phase Diagrams 7. The Iron-Iron Carbide Equilibrium Diagram 8. The Heat Treatment of Steel 9.
Alloy Steels 10. Tool Steels 11. Cast Iron 12. Nonferrous Metals and Alloys 13. Metals at High and Low
Temperatures 14. Wear of Metals 15. Corrosion of Metals 16. Powder Metallurgy 17. Failure Analysis
Appendix: Temperature-conversion TablexAZCxsa csdgsfdgdsnhgfcnfgngAC A

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his text to cover the development of metallurgy as a science. Only certain highlights will be mentioned
here for the purpose of orientation. The worker of metals is mentioned in the Bible and in Greek and
Norse mythology. Metallurgy as an art has been practiced since ancient times. Ancient man knew and
used many native metals. Gold was used for ornaments, plates, and utensils as early as 3500 B.C. The art
of smelting, refining, and shaping metals was highly developed by both the Egyptians and the Chinese.
The ancient Egyptians knew how to separate iron from its ore and that steel had the ability to harden.
but iron was not used widely before 1000 B.C. Iron was not popular with ancient people because of its
tendency to rust, and they preferred working with gold, silver, copper, brass, and bronze. Knowledge of
dealing with metals was generally passed directly from master to apprentice in the Middle Ages, leading
to an aura of superstition surrounding many of the processes. Very little w 1

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