A History of the Trade in Tin: A Short Description of Tin Mining and Metallurgy; a History of the Origin and Progress of the Tin-plate Trade. And a Description of the Ancient and Modern Processes of Manufacturing Tin-plates |
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Page 28
... dipped twice in tin ) . This is called refined tin , and its quality has been so much improved ( although it is still unequal to grain tin ) that by most manufacturers no other tin is now used . TIN ORE . THE FOLLOWING ACCOUNT OF TIN ...
... dipped twice in tin ) . This is called refined tin , and its quality has been so much improved ( although it is still unequal to grain tin ) that by most manufacturers no other tin is now used . TIN ORE . THE FOLLOWING ACCOUNT OF TIN ...
Page 48
... rolling in 1783 ; and the annealing - pot , invented by Mr. Thomas Morgans in 1829 , and from that date to the present ( patent rolling for dipping excepted ) , the improvements have been more in detail 48 HISTORY OF TIN AND TIN - PLATES .
... rolling in 1783 ; and the annealing - pot , invented by Mr. Thomas Morgans in 1829 , and from that date to the present ( patent rolling for dipping excepted ) , the improvements have been more in detail 48 HISTORY OF TIN AND TIN - PLATES .
Page 54
... dip it into melted tin : when it is taken out the tin covers it everywhere , that is to say , it sticks all over the surface . Why , then , is there any difficulty in tinning sheets of iron ... dipped 54 HISTORY OF TIN AND TIN - PLATES .
... dip it into melted tin : when it is taken out the tin covers it everywhere , that is to say , it sticks all over the surface . Why , then , is there any difficulty in tinning sheets of iron ... dipped 54 HISTORY OF TIN AND TIN - PLATES .
Page 55
... dip them into acid waters for a certain time . These waters achieve slowly , but at smaller cost , what the file would do immediately , they " gnaw " the surface . Besides , as many sheets are dipped at the same time , the effect of the ...
... dip them into acid waters for a certain time . These waters achieve slowly , but at smaller cost , what the file would do immediately , they " gnaw " the surface . Besides , as many sheets are dipped at the same time , the effect of the ...
Page 57
... dipped into the water , it is a good plan to heat the water ; but is it best to begin by dipping the iron into the sour waters ? people have tried to dissolve iron , and it is certain that , for a metal to be dissolved , it must be ...
... dipped into the water , it is a good plan to heat the water ; but is it best to begin by dipping the iron into the sour waters ? people have tried to dissolve iron , and it is certain that , for a metal to be dissolved , it must be ...
Other editions - View all
A History of the Trade in Tin: A Short Description of Tin Mining and ... Philip William Flower No preview available - 2014 |
A History of the Trade in Tin: A Short Description of Tin Mining and ... Philip William Flower No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
acid ANDREW YARRANTON annealing Banca bar iron Bohemia boxes brass brought called Carmarthen Carmarthen ditto Cassiterides charcoal coal coating common copper Cornish Cornwall cwts dipped ditto ditto Duke Duke of Saxony Dutch Edmund Heming Elbe employed England English Tin Exported fire foreign tin Forest of Dean forge furnace Germany Glamorgan Glamorgan ditto grain tin grease hammer hath heat Heming Heming his executors Huel improve inches invention Iron Miner island John Hanbury King Kingdom Land Lleision melted tin Menadarva metal monies Monmouth Monmouthshire obtained operation passed patent Phoenicians pickling pieces Poldice Pontypool present produce publick purpose quantity River rolls Romans rust sal-ammoniac Saxony sent sheets of iron sold stone Stream sufficient surface taken tallow thereof thick things timber tin plates tin pot tin-plates Tinn Tons trade Trav Tyre vessels Wales Woods workmen Yarranton دو
Popular passages
Page 8 - During the recess of the tide the intervening space is left dry, and they carry over abundance of tin to this place in their carts.
Page xvii - And king Solomon sent and fetched Hiram out of Tyre. He was a widow's son of tb,e tribe of Naphtali, and his father was a man of Tyre, a worker in brass: and he was filled with wisdom, and understanding, and cunning to work all works in brass. And he came to king Solomon, and wrought all his work.
Page 42 - Philip and Mary, by the grace of God King and Queen of England, France, Naples, Jerusalem, and Ireland ; Defenders of the Faith ; Princes of Spain and Sicily ; Archdukes of Austria ; Dukes of Milan, Burgundy, and Brabant ; Counts of Hapsburg, Flanders, and Tyrol...
Page 101 - England's Improvement by Sea and Land; to Outdo the Dutch without Fighting; to Pay Debts without Moneys; to set at Work all the Poor of England with the growth of our own Lands...
Page 8 - Towards the north of Europe there is evidently a very great quantity of gold, but how procured I am unable to say with certainty ; though it is said that the Arimaspians, a oneeyed people, steal it from the griffins.
Page viii - Fraud, avarice, and force, their places took. Then sails were spread to every wind that blew, Raw were the sailors and the depths were new ; Trees, rudely hollow'd, did the waves sustain, Ere ships in triumph plough'd the watery plain. Then landmarks limited to each his right ; For all before was common as the light.
Page 9 - They subsist by their cattle, leading for the most part a wandering life. Of the metals they have tin and lead, which with skins they barter with the merchants for earthenware, salt, and brazen vessels.
Page 82 - This is merely water in which bran has been steeped for nine or ten days, until it has acquired a sufficient acidity for the purpose. The design of putting the plates into the troughs singly, is, that there may be more certainty of the liquor getting between them, and both the sides of every plate being soaked alike in the lees.
Page 107 - II), and continued at the Trade some years. But the shop being too narrow and short for my large mind, I took leave of my Master, but said nothing. Then I lived a country life for some years, and in the late Wars I was a soldier, and sometimes had the...
Page 111 - Awe, being in length about twenty miles ; the tin-works being there fixed upon a great river running clear along the valley, and also upon some little rivulets that run out of the mountains of Bohemia and Saxony ; and coming to the works, we were very civilly treated, and, contrary to our expectation, we had much liberty to view, and see the works go — with the way and manner of their working and extending the plates, as also the perfect view of such materials as they used in clearing the plates,...