Harvey armor was a type of steel naval armor developed in the early 1890s in which the front surfaces of the plates were case hardening. The method for doing this was known as the Harvey process, and was invented by the United States engineer Hayward Augustus Harvey.
This type of armor was used in the construction of until superseded by Krupp armour in the late 1890s.
The Harvey United Steel Company was a steel cartel whose chairman was . The year 1894 would see the ten main producers of armor plate, including Vickers, Armstrong, Krupp, Schneider, Carnegie and Bethlehem Steel, form the Harvey Syndicate.
Compound armor was made by pouring molten steel between a red-hot wrought iron backing plate and a hardened steel front plate to welding them together. This process produced a sharp transition between the properties of the two plates in a very small distance. As consequence, the two plates could separate when struck by a shell, and the rear plate was often not elastic enough to stop the splinters. With the discovery of nickel-steel in 1889, compound armor was rendered obsolete.
While the American navy used nickel steel for Harvey armor (roughly 0.2 percent carbon, 0.6 percent manganese, 3.5 percent nickel), the British used normal steels since their tests had shown that ordinary steel subjected to the Harvey process had the same resistance to penetration as nickel steel, although it was not quite as tough.
Harvey armor was taken up by all of the major navies, since of Harvey armor offered the same protection as of nickel-steel armor. It was in turn rendered obsolete by the development of Krupp armour in the late 1890s.
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