¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Inwalls
1. inwall [v] - See also: inwall
Lexicographical Neighbors of Inwalls
Literary usage of Inwalls
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Study of the Blast Furnace by Harbison-Walker Refractories Company (1911)
"inwalls — The in walls comprise those portions of the furnace from the mantle
up, and in turn are often considered as being divided into the lower inwall, ..."
2. Transactions by American Institute of Mining Engineers, Metallurgical Society of AIME, Society of Mining Engineers of AIME. (1882)
"THE binding of the boshes and inwalls of blast furnaces has always been an
expensive piece of work. When the old stone stack was replaced by the iron shell, ..."
3. The Making, Shaping and Treating of Steel by James McIntyre Camp, Charles Blaine Francis (1920)
"In the old furnaces, the lines of the inwalls were straight, and the boshes ...
The inwalls are surrounded by a steel jacket as in the thicker type, ..."
4. The Making, Shaping and Treating of Steel by James McIntyre Camp, Charles Blaine Francis (1920)
"The inwalls are surrounded by a steel jacket as in the thicker type, ...
Thin Walled Type: In this type the inwalls are from nine to eighteen inches thick, ..."
5. The Blast Furnace and the Manufacture of Pig Iron: An Elementary Treatise by Robert Forsythe (1913)
"Except in very large furnaces, the inwalls are usually 27 inches thick, and are
composed of finegrained, hard clay bricks, designed to resist abrasion. ..."
6. The Blast Furnace and the Manufacture of Pig Iron: An Elementary Treatise by Robert Forsythe, 1869-1907 (1908)
"Except in very large furnaces, the inwalls are usually 27 inches thick, ...
The hearth and bosh need a more refractory brick than the inwalls, to endure the ..."
7. Transactions of the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and (1881)
"When cleaned out the inwalls were found to he'll! good condition, with no
indications of cutting or irregular action. The boshes were found to have been ..."
8. The School of Mines Quarterly by Columbia University School of Chemistry (1899)
"Stale the following dimensions : Height of furnace; height of stock line ; height
of bosh ; height of inwalls ; height of hearth ; height of tuyeres; ..."