Scrit":3fgv0arz said:Very close, but not quite there yet. Think about the invention of a fellow Canadian and you'll have itInspector":3fgv0arz said:#2 Box/finger joint cutter. (for drawers or boxes.) I think I see big saw teeth through the slot on the left side of the beast.
Nope. It doesn't actiually trim anything, but it makes something.....Inspector":3fgv0arz said:#3 Guillotine for trimming paper, books etc. My other thought was a shear for slicing shavings for packaging.
Scrit
Yessir! It is a Robinson ZU/E Electric Dovetailer which could cut pins in one end and tails in the other on boards up to 18in long:Shivers":3frzmvop said:No2 wouldn't be an automatic dovetailer would it.doing tails & sockets at each end.
mr spanton":3towpp19 said:Would machine no 3 be a device to trim shingle's to size?
Well it is indeed a guillotine slicer, but I thought that shingles had to be rived along the grain otherwise they lose part of their strength. As for oyster veneers, heve they ever been that popular to warrant a 5 tonne machine?jasonB":3towpp19 said:No 3 could be for slicing oyster veneers.
Jason has it! The machine is a Robinson VO Timber Slicer and weighed in at all of 102 cwts (or a tad over 5 tonnes) and was some 12 feet wide x 9 feet deep. It was "specially designed for the rapid and economical production of box boards, giving increased output whilst reducing wastage to a minimum". The advertising literature goes on to say that it was capable of cutting 10,000 pieces of 24 x 6in timber per hour and in doing so would make a saving of 52 cubic feet of timber over using a bandsaw to saw the materials. The machine was loaded with steamed timber (boiler attended by a lad, no less) to make the slicing operation quicker and easier. Of course with the move towards cardboard and plastics in the 1960s machines such as this fell out of favour and are no longer seen in the UK, although I do wonder if any were exported and are still in use. after oragges and certain fruits still come in wooden cratesjasonB":3vxwuclj said:Slicing thin boards for fruit & veg crates etc.
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