Wire Rope -- A Machine

THIS is the age of scientific development in all branches of industry. It demands efficiency in both methods of production, and the handling and use of finished products. Maximum production with a minimum of cost is the aim of both producer and consumer.

John A. Roebling's Sons Company believe that all users of Wire Rope are interested in the factors governing the design and use of this product, and the elimination of the causes which shorten its service.

For this reason, WIRE ENGINEERING has planned a group of articles which will treat of Wire Rope in many phases of its manufacture and use.

This series of articles will include a detailed explanation of the various rope constructions; the many conditions of operation; the data covering each installation, which is necessary for the determination of the proper rope to furnish; the correct method of ordering rope, through to the factors covering the correct time for removing a wire rope from service.

Machinery may be defined as "a combination of parts or means which, working together, produce a specific end." Wire rope is therefore a machine in which the parts are made up of the center or core individual wires and strands. This machine, although rugged in character, may be considered a delicate mechanism in many respects. Its ultimate service will depend entirely upon its treatment during installation and throughout its period of service.

Demands of modern industry have called for increased production in all branches of manufacture and operation, and at the same time the maintenance of an exacting quality. To keep pace with this progress, the size of machinery is being constantly increased. To fully visualize this condition, compare the giant steam and electric locomotives of today with that of Stevenson's "Rocket" of 1829, which weighed only 4.25 tons. Compare Robert Fulton's "Clermont" of 1807 with the mighty "Queen Mary" and "Normandie".

In nearly all cases, increased power and strength meant increased weight. Not so with wire rope. To increase the size and weight of wire rope in proportion to strength would mean costly and impractical sizes of sheave and drum equipment, which would prohibit expansion in size to secure such strength. Wire Rope manufacturers have been confronted with the problem of producing desired physical properties in their products with strict limitations in size, and this has been accomplished by refinements in steel manufacture, wire drawing and rope fabrication.

Previous to the building of the Brooklyn Bridge, high strength ropes were fabricated with iron wires. Next came cast steel wire, for increased strength and service. The next improvement in rope quality and strength was represented in the extra strong cast steel grade. Following this, plow steel grade was introduced, which even today has many uses in service where highest strength and durability are not required. Mighty bridges spanning our waterways; high speed mine hoists thousands of feet in depth, man's quest for oil in deep fields a mile underground, and the many modern giants of the excavating equipment field, all call for the utmost in strength, quality and durability. To meet these exacting requirements, "Blue Center" Steel was developed by Roebling. This steel, produced in our own furnaces, is drawn into wire and fabricated into rope under strict specifications and rigid inspection, from the Steel Mill to the Shipping Department, with the result that in the highly competitive field of today "Blue Center" Steel Wire Ropes are producing maximum service at minimum cost.

Wire ropes are made in many constructions and several grades, each particular type designed for specific service. By varying the rope construction, the manufacturer may distribute the metal and proportion the flexibility of this wire rope ''machine'' to best withstand the service it is to perform. In the final analysis it is not so much the construction that performs the service, but the quality of the steel wire with which each rope is made.

As a manufacturer of a high grade product, we believe that the various articles to be published in future numbers of WIRE ENGINEERING will be both instructive and interesting to all persons who are either directly or indirectly concerned with the use of wire rope. We will endeavor to cover all of the many factors which are involved in this subject. We will appreciate having our readers submit any individual problems or they may have concerning the use of wire rope, which will be submitted to our Wire Rope Engineering Department for analysis and study.


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