In the interest of perfect honesty...
I've never actually seen the process, either.
But I have read about steel making, and worked in barrel making with a metallurgical engineer - who explained the process to me.
As I understand it, all commercial steels these days are cast in large billets - there is an effort to remove the slag from the melt before the casting, but sometimes a certain amount of slag is retained in the melt. In the casting process, the billet cools from the outside to the center, and any retained slag tends to migrate to the center of the casting, which part solidifies last. The casting is also often trimmed to further eliminate retained slag, but, again, not all of it is always removed.
When the cast billet is reduced to round bars, such as that prepared for barrel making, the original casting is reduced to the desired shape and dimension by the processes of extrusion or passing through successively smaller rollers - in either case, any slag which was originally in the center of the casting is retained in the center of the final bar stock, resulting in the 'pipe' phenomenon. Also, any residual slag is most likely to be found in only one end of the original billet, so that, of the full amount of bar produced from any given billet, only a portion will likely be affected by the retained slag, if present.
Finally, quality control in the steel making process should, and usually does, eliminate any stock which may contain such inclusion, but (obviously), some occasionally slips by.
mhb - Mike
Could you elaborate Mike? Especially the phrase "......which was then rolled into a bar, leaving the pipe along the center of the blank."
I'm having trouble picturing how it's rolled into a bar.... I've never even driven through a town with a foundry so far's I know
Thanks!
al