The base paper is produced on a Fourdrinier machine equipped with process computer control. |
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The Fourdrinier machine has for many years been well known and most widely used for making news print paper. |
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After being bleached, the pulp is moved through the Fourdrinier machine where it is dried and shaped. |
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In one of the wings are two 62-inch Fourdrinier machines, each driven by an upright steam engine. |
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On a Fourdrinier machine the watermark is created by a dandy roll as the stock passes through the wet end processes. |
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The paper machine is known as a Fourdrinier after the financiers, brothers Sealy and Henry Fourdrinier, who were stationers in London. |
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The first paper making machine was the Fourdrinier machine, built by Sealy and Henry Fourdrinier, stationers in London. |
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The Fourdrinier paper machine, patented in 1799, was one of the earliest of the Industrial Revolution era continuous manufacturing processes. |
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Modern papermaking began in the early 19th century in Europe with the development of the Fourdrinier machine. |
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Key inventors include Henry Fourdrinier, Heinrich Voelter and Carl Daniel Ekman, among others. |
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