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Wind big rolls on small cores.


A new surface winder with a single large-diameter drum and two pairs of support arms (Mil.) a command in the manual of arms in responce to which the piece is held vertically at the shoulder, with the hammer resting on the left forearm, which is passed horizontally across the body in front; also, the position assumed in response to this command.

See also: Support
 can wind large slit rolls of thin sheet or nonwovens Nonwoven textiles are those which are neither woven nor knit, for example felt. General use hyphenates the word, but industrial use spells it as one word. Non-wovens are typically not strong (unless reinforced by a backing or densified).  on small-diameter cores. It thereby makes shippable rolls of 7- to 10-mil webs in-line In-line

Used in the context of general equities. (1) An order or market in a specific security within the inside market; 2) any announcement (earnings) that adheres closely to Wall Street analysts' expectations.
 without an intermediate rewinding step. The trick to the new ATS (Advanced Technology SurfaStart) winder from Black Clawson Clawson, city (1990 pop. 13,874), Oakland co., SE Mich., a residential suburb between Pontiac and Detroit; settled c.1833, inc. 1920.  Converting Machinery Inc., Fulton, N.Y., is that it starts winding a new roll on primary support arms at the 11:00 position on the surface-winding drum. The roll is supported by sandwiching it between the nip and winding drum. This eliminates vibration problems at high winding speeds of up to 2500 ft/min. When the new roll reaches about 24 in. diam., secondary arms move over and transfer it slowly to the 1:00 o'clock position on the winding drum, where it continues to build up to 62 in. diam. Tel: (315) 598-7121 * PTDirect: 683CT

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Title Annotation:Keeping Up With Extrusion
Publication:Plastics Technology
Date:Dec 1, 2004
Words:155
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