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The Water Supply of the El Paso and Southwestern Railway from Carrizozo to Santa Rosa, N. Mex. - American Society of Civil Engineers: Transactions, No. 1170 by J. L. Campbell
page 10 of 38 (26%)
some points where this lifting was great enough to rupture the asphalt,
and the soil is heavily charged with alkali, some corrosion has begun.

The integrity and impermeability of this asphalt coat are quite as vital
as constant saturation. This coating protects the entire pipe from
exterior contact with destructive agencies. With such effective exterior
protection, a constantly full pipe is not so imperative. In the exterior
protection of the wood, this coated pipe has quite an advantage over
continuous stave pipe.

Each piece of pipe goes directly from the winder to the asphalt rolls,
then to an adjacent saw-dust table, then back to the rolls, then to the
table again, and then to the dry finishing rolls at the opposite end of
the table. The coating thus consists of two layers of asphalt and two of
saw-dust. When the pipe leaves the finishing rolls, the coat is hard and
smooth and about 1 3/16 in. thick. This describes the coating as done at
Bay City, Mich.

At Elmira, N.Y., one application of asphalt and saw-dust only, without a
finishing dry roll, completed the work; but the band was run through a
bath of hot asphalt as it was wound, thus coating its underside also.
This initial treatment of the band on the Wykoff pipe is necessary
because the exterior of the stave is neither planed nor turned to a
circle. The exterior of the pipe forms a polygon, and the band is in
perfect contact only at the angles. The theory in regard to the Michigan
pipe is that the perfect contact of the band and the wood on the true
exterior circle excludes air from the under surface of the metal, and
prevents corrosion. Experience appears to justify this theory.

_Cast-iron Pipe_.--Beginning at the first pumping plant at Coyote, at
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