Morton Poole calender roll grinding lathe, which has attained pre-eminence both in Europe and the United States from the great accuracy and fine finish of the work it produces.
I am a linen-draper bold, As all the world doth know, And my good friend the calender Will lend his horse to go.
After the paper passes over the drying cylinders of the machine it is passed through the calenders in the usual way, but the surface of the paper is damped by means of a fine water spray just before it enters the calender rolls.
In the present case there can be little doubt that the title of Spenser's work was suggested by the Calender of Shepherds.
Having satisfied his curiosity, he thought himself obliged to give some marks of grandeur and generosity to the calender princes, and also to give the three ladies some proofs of his bounty.
The third calender having finished this relation of his adventures, Zobeide addressed her speech to him and his fellow-calenders thus: Go wherever you think fit; you are all three at liberty.
I cannot enough express, Madam, said the calender how much I was astonished, when I saw the king my uncle abuse the prince his son, thus, after he was dead.
He had no sooner returned this answer, than this third calender you see there overtook us.
The third calender having finished this relation of his adventures, Zobeide addressed him and his fellow calenders thus: "Go wherever you think proper, you are at liberty.
He had no sooner returned this answer, than a third calender overtook us.
The caliph having satisfied his curiosity, thought himself obliged to shew his generosity to the calender princes, and also to give the three ladies some proof of his bounty.
Assuming that the paper is perfect as it leaves the driers there is still a chance that one or more of the calender rolls may get out of true, especially when starting a run after they have been idle long enough to get cold.
A common method of obtaining a high finish on heavy papers is by the use of “water doctors,” which keeps two or more of the calender rolls moist, dampening the paper while it is being calendered.
Among other defects arising on the calenders are little scarlike depressions in the paper, made by small scraps of paper which have become lodged on a calender roll and are embossed into the web at each revolution of the roll.
Lastly the unevenness may be caused by the calender rolls themselves being in poor condition.
For example, the paper sometimes may run slack through the calenders, with the result that it wrinkles and cuts in diagonal jags called “calender cuts.
Next a stack of ironcalender rolls, and a set of reels.
It is more difficult to exclude calender cuts from roll paper, as it is not always easy to see them in the fast-running paper, so that an occasional cut is not an unforgivable sin.
The arrangement and number of smoothing and calender rolls is also dependent on the class of paper to be made.
An “antique” surface is obtained by skipping the calender rolls and leaving the paper rough as it comes off the felt to the driers.
A plain, smoothed surface is obtained by passing the sheets, which are automatically fed, by a system of tapes, through calender stacks, called sheet calenders.
I am a linendraper bold, As all the world doth know, And my good friend the calender Will lend his horse to go.
From this point the cotton is conducted in the form of a sheet between four heavy calender or compression rollers, the rollers being superimposed over each other, and the cotton receiving three compressions in its passage.
From this point cotton is collected into the form of a loose rope or "sliver," and passed first through a trumpet-shaped mouth, and then through a pair of calender rollers about six inches wide and four inches in diameter.
Upon this roller the slivers are wound in the form of a lap, being assimilated to one another by the action of the drawing and calender rollers.
The eighteen slivers now pass side by side through three pairs of drawing rollers with a slight draft, and between calender rollers to a wooden "core" or roller.
I am a linen-draper bold, As all the world doth know, And my good friend the Calender Will lend his horse to go.
From a small test on a large calender stack it was readily shown that the paper produced is capable of taking a satisfactory finish.
A five-bowl calender is shown on the extreme right in Fig.
Provision is thus made for driving the calender in both directions.
For ordinarycalender finish, the surface speed of all the rollers is the same.
Cloths both from the calender and the mangle now pass through a measuring machine, the clock of which records the length passed through.
For calender finish, the bowls flatten the cloth by pressing out the threads and picks, so that all the interstices which appear in most cloths as they leave the loom, and which are exaggerated in the plan view in Fig.
He replied that I was right, and before he could say more the third calender came up.
We know no more than you," said the Calender to whom he had spoken.
Each Calender took the one he preferred, and began to play a well-known air, while the ladies sang the words of the song.
In a modern five-bowl calender the bottom bowl is made of cast iron, the second of compressed cotton or paper, the third of iron being hollow and fitted with steam heating apparatus.
The number of bowls in an ordinary calender varies between two and six according to the character of the finish for which it is intended.
Moire or watered effects are produced by running two pieces face to face through a calender or by means of an embossing calender.
The friction calender, the object of which is to produce a high gloss on the fabric, differs from the ordinary calender inasmuch as one of the bowls is caused to revolve at a greater speed than the others.
In an ordinary three-bowl friction calender the bottom bowl is made of cast iron, the middle one of compressed cotton or paper, and the top one (the friction bowl) of highly polished chilled iron.
The embossing calender is usually constructed of two bowls, one of which is of steel and the other of compressed cotton or paper.
The same calender may also be used for "chasing," in which two pieces are passed through, face to face, in order to produce an imitation linen finish.
When the lap is of the required length and the machine knocks off, the large Lap Rolls as well as the Calender Rolls, Feed Apron and Cages stop, and the lap is not broken.
After dyeing they are run through a mangle containing the sizing substance, then dried, dampened, and run through a calender machine.
The calender finishes may be classed as dull, luster, glazed, watered or moire, and embossed.
The calender always flattens and imparts a luster to the cloth passed through it.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "calender" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: buffer; iron; mangle; press; roll; roller; smooth; smoother