Grinder Sanding Flap
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Float glass
I want to introduct something about HM-DA660 deluxe binding machine. automatically gluing the case cover -paper ,fixing the case boards ,bending the flaps and calendaring the case heating the glue with timing device . automatic feeding adjusting device. Maximum 7 Un-normative case-boards operating device. case open size :250x150--900x480mm gutter width :4--12mm bent flaps width :8--20mm gray board thickness :1--4mm medium strips width :20--80mm speed :30pcs/min power:9kw gross weight:2700kg HM-600A is an automatic machine that can finish the cover gluing, the two-sides board paper and medium strip location, edge wrapping and two-way calendaring one time. It can used to not only making book hulls but also the canton boxes. It features and standard configurations: CPU controlld function and parameters setting&faullt display automatically guling the case cover-paper,fixing the case boards,bending the flaps and calendaring the case. heating the glue with timing device. automatic feeding adujusting devic
Use of float glass at Crystal Palace railway station, London
Float glass is a sheet of glass made by floating molten glass on a bed of molten tin. This method gives the sheet uniform thickness and very flat surfaces. Modern windows are made from float glass. Most float glass is soda-lime glass, but relatively minor quantities of specialty borosilicate and flat panel display glass are also produced using the float glass process. The float glass process is also known as the Pilkington process, named after the British glass manufacturer Pilkington, which pioneered the technique (invented by Sir Alastair Pilkington) in the 1950s.
History
Old window containing a sheet of float glass in the upper left section, Jena, Germany. The remaining sections are possibly not float glass as indicated by the distorted reflections of a tree.
In earlier centuries, window glass or flat glass was made by blowing large cylinders or large disks. The cylinders were cut open and flattened, and then panes were cut from the sheets. Most glass for windows up to the early 19th century was made from such rondels, while most window glass during the 19th century was made using the cylinder method (these 'cylinders' were 6 to 8 feet (2 to 2.5 m) long and 10 to 14 inches (250 to 350 mm) in diameter).
The first advances in automating glass manufacturing were patented in 1848 by Henry Bessemer, an English engineer. His system produced a continuous ribbon of flat glass by forming the ribbon between rollers. This was an expensive process, as the surfaces of the glass needed polishing. If the glass could be set on a perfectly smooth body this would cut costs considerably. Attempts were made to form flat glass on a molten tin bath, notably in the US. Several patents were awarded, but this process was unworkable.
Before the development of float glass, larger sheets of plate glass were made by casting a large puddle of glass on an iron surface, and then polishing both sides, a costly process. From the early 1920s, a continuous ribbon of plate glass was passed through a lengthy series of inline grinders and polishers, reducing glass losses and cost.
Glass of lower quality, sheet glass, was made by drawing upwards from a pool of molten glass a thin sheet, held at the edges by rollers. As it cooled the rising sheet stiffened and could then be cut. The two surfaces were less parallel and of lower quality than those of float glass. This process continued in use for many years after the development of float glass.
Between 1953 and 1957, Sir Alastair Pilkington and Kenneth Bickerstaff of the UK's Pilkington Brothers developed the first successful commercial application for forming a continuous ribbon of glass using a molten tin bath on which the molten glass flows unhindered under the influence of gravity. The success of this process lay in the careful balance of the volume of glass fed onto the bath, where it was flattened by its own weight. Full scale profitable sales of float glass were first achieved in 1960.
Manufacture
Float glass uses common glass making raw materials, typically consisting of sand, soda ash (sodium carbonate), dolomite, limestone, and salt cake (sodium sulfate). Other materials may be used as colourants, refining agents or to adjust the physical and chemical properties of the glass. The raw materials are mixed in a batch mixing process, then fed together with suitable cullet (waste glass), in a controlled ratio, into a furnace where it is heated to approximately 1500. Common flat glass furnaces are 9 m wide, 45 m long, and contain more than 1200 tons of glass. Once molten, the temperature of the glass is stablised to approximately 1200 to ensure a homogeneous specific gravity.
The molten glass is fed into a "tin bath", a bath of molten tin (about 3-4 m wide, 50 m long, 6 cm deep), through a delivery canal. The amount of glass allowed to pour onto the molten tin is controlled by a gate.
Tin is suitable for the float glass process because it has a high specific gravity, is immiscible, and is cohesive. Tin, however, is highly reactive with oxygen and oxidises in a natural atmosphere to form Tin dioxide (SnO2). Known in the production process as dross, the tin dioxide adheres to the glass. To prevent oxidation, the tin bath is provided with a positive pressure protective atmosphere consisting of a mixture of nitrogen and hydrogen.
The glass flows onto the tin surface forming a floating ribbon with perfectly smooth surfaces on both sides and an even thickness. As the glass flows along the tin bath, the temperature is gradually reduced from 1100 until the sheet can be lifted from the tin onto rollers at approximately 600. The glass ribbon is pulled off the bath by rollers at a controlled speed. Variation...(and so on) To get More information , you can visit some products about roll straightening machine, griddle mesh machine, . The HM-DA660 deluxe binding machine products should be show more here!
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