[Trade Journal] Publication: Glass Industry New York, NY, United States |
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A New Automatic Glass Blowing Machine
A new automatic glass blowing machine, the latest creation of Frank O'Neill, president of The O'Neill Machine Company, Toledo, Ohio, and known as "No. 30," is about three-quarters the size of the standard "No. 25" and operates at an air pressure of 35 pounds. It is designed along lines similar to No. 25, but carries only five blanks while the No. 25 has six.
In speed the new model runs from 18 to 20 per minute and the manufacturers state that under good working conditions it will even do better. It can be used with any feeder and the makers point out that it has been thoroughly tested out also with hand feeding. The new machine is intended to for small ware ranging from 1/2 ounce up to 12 ounce capacity, and 8 inches in height under the finish. Among its new features are a stationary cam to open the blank as it approaches the transfer point, which saves considerable time in transferring; a double finish blowing arrangement, which prevents bottles such as panels and thin ware from sagging. It also helps to set the glass, so that it will be in better condition to rest on the conveyor. This double blow arrangement can be disconnected so only one blow head will operate. The No. 30 machine also introduces a new type of take-off device. This take-off device lifts the bottle from the mold in a vertical, radial motion, just the same as a boy would take it out with a pair of tongs. Most take-off devices are either a horizontal slide, or have a horizontal radial motion, and as everyone knows, this causes the bottle to swing in the gripping tongs, thereby, in some cases, causing checks in the neck, or bending it.
The larger cut shows one of a battery of three No. 30 machines connected with a feeder and making a well known proprietary bottle. The small cut shows a standard No. 25 machine connected to a single feeder, which, on its first twenty-five hour run, made a production of 18 per minute on 5 1/4 ounce bottles. Blow or finish molds which have been used on the No. 25 machine can readily be adapted to the No. 30, and in quite a number of cases it will be possible to use the blank or parison mold. It is interesting to trace the development of the O'Neill machines from the first type unit built years ago, through various intermediate stages, each bringing the model nearer to the automatic until now when, attached to a feeder, the machine is absolutely automatic. Further developments with a view to saving labor are coming, according to F. E. H. Jaeger, secretary of The O'Neill Machine Company, who states that it will only be a short time until O'Neill machines are absolutely automatic from tank to conveyor.
OFFICERS OF THE O'NEILL MACHINE COMPANY
The Company's Toledo plant, where the machines are made, is housed in a modern day-light factory with every convenience possible for its employees. The building is fire-proof, equipped with a sprinkler system, and its employees have access to a lunch room in the building where good, wholesome food is supplied at a moderate cost. Besides having the plant taxed to its limit by domestic orders, the foreign business of the company has become so large that last year a plant was opened at Albany Works, Trenmar Gardens, London, England, with Wilson M. O'Neill, vice-president, in charge. This puts the company in an excellent position to look after its extensive foreign trade in machines and molds. During the past year the company has shipped machines to England, Scotland, France, Switzerland, India, Canada, Mexico, Argentine Republic, Venezuela, Brazil, and Japan. Some recent installations in the United States were at the Hazel-Atlas Glass plant, Washington, Pa.; the Hygeia Glass Corporation, Lancaster, N. Y.; Salem Glass Works, Salem, N. J.; Maryland Glass Corporation, Baltimore, Md.; Lynchburg Glass Works, Lynchburg, Va.; American Glass Works, Richmond, Va.; Nivison-Weiskopf Company, Reading, O.; and the Sheffield Glass Bottle Company, Sheffield, Pa. |
Keywords: | Lynchburg Glass Works : O'Neill Machine Company |
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Researcher: | Bob Stahr |
Date completed: | December 6, 2005 by: Glenn Drummond; |