Scientific American Supplement, No. 841, February 13, 1892 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 155 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 841, February 13, 1892.

Scientific American Supplement, No. 841, February 13, 1892 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 155 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 841, February 13, 1892.

For seamless hose the tube is made in a tubing machine and slipped upon the hose pole by reversing the process that is used in removing hose by air compression.  In other words, a knot is tied in one end of the fifty foot tube and the other end is placed against the hose pole and being carefully inflated with air it is slipped on without the least trouble.  For various kinds of hose the processes vary, and there are machines for winding with wire and intricate processes for the heavy grades of suction hose, etc.  For steam hose, brewers’, and acid hose, special resisting compounds are used, that as a rule are the secrets of the various manufacturers.  Cotton hose is woven through machines expressly designed for that purpose, and afterward has a half-cured rubber tube drawn through it.  One end is then securely stopped up and the other end forced on a cone through which steam is introduced to the inside of the hose, forcing the rubber against the cotton cover, finishing the cure and fixing it firmly in its place.

CORRUGATED MATTING.

After the mixing of the compound and the calendering, that is the spreading it in sheets, the great roll of rubber and cloth that is to be made into corrugated matting is sent to the pressman.  Here it is hung in a rack and fifteen or twenty feet of it drawn between the plates of the huge hydraulic steam press.  The bottom plate of this press is grooved its whole length, so that when the upper platen is let down the plain sheet of rubber is forced into the grooves and the corrugations are formed.  While in that position steam is let into the upper and lower platens and the matting is cured.  After it has been in there the proper time, cold water is let into the press, it is cooled off, and the upper platen being raised, it is ready to come out.  A simple device for loosening the matting from the grooves into which it has been forced is a long steel rod, with a handle on one hand like an auger handle, which, being introduced under the edge and twisted, allows the air to enter with it and releases it from the mould.

PACKING.

Sheet packing is often times made in a press, like corrugated matting.  The varieties, however, known as gum core have to go through a different process.  Usually a core is squirted through a tube machine and the outside covering of jute or cotton, or whatever the fabric may be, is put on by a braider or is wrapped about it somewhat after the manner of the old fashioned cloth-wrapped tubing.  The fabric is either treated with some heat-resisting mixture or something that is a lubricant, plumbago and oil being the compound.  Other packings are made from the ends of belts cut out in a circular form and treated with a lubricant.  There are scores of styles that make special claims for excellences that are made in a variety of ways, but as a rule the general system as outlined above is followed.

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Scientific American Supplement, No. 841, February 13, 1892 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.