File:Rolling mill for shingling after puddling.png

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Français : Laminoir utilisé pour le cinglage de la loupe issue du four à puddlge.
English: Fig. 597 is a front view of a pair of rollers, used in the manufacture of iron in connection with the puddling furnace. They are about 4 feet long, divided into 4 parts, the largest being about 20 inches in diameter. That portion of the upper roller under which the metal is first passed, is cut in a deep and irregular manner, resembling that chiselling in stone called moveque work, that it may the more easily get hold of and compress the metal when almost in a fluid state. The plate is next passed under the cross-cut portion of the roller, and successively through the flat sections. The lower roller, it will be observed, is formed with raised collars at intervals, to keep the metal in its proper course. The rollers are connected by cog-wheels placed upon their axes ; upon the lowermost of these, works also the wheel by means of which the revolution is communicated. The cheeks are of cast iron, very massive, that they may bear the violent usage to which they are subjected.
Date
Source A supplement to Ure's Dictionary of Arts, Manufactures, and Mines, - containing a clear exposition of their principles and practice, p.957
Author Robert Hunt (1807-1887)

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current10:02, 3 February 2018Thumbnail for version as of 10:02, 3 February 2018348 × 244 (53 KB)Borvan53 (talk | contribs)User created page with UploadWizard

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