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WAR PAINT

NEW MACHINE SPRAYS 5000 SHELLS IN 8 HOURS Three people can put the paint on 5000 of Britain's war shells in 8 hours with a new machine designed and built in only 10 days by British makers' 75! paint-spraying equipment The machine does the work of 120 men and women in one-fiftieth of the time. The first one showed that a 25-pounder shell could lie given its coat of protective paint in 4.8 seconds, a process which previously called for four or five handlings and took as many minutes to carry out. Two watchers and a loader are the only labour required. Another machine designed to put on automatically the red and green marking symbols was evolved in three or four weeks, while a smaller version of this, for 20 mm. shells, marks 30 shells a minute, or one every two seconds. These technicians were able l to tackle the job because of their experience in making machinery for lacquering food cans, many of which have been supplied to food canners since war broke out. They are coating one-pound cans at the rate of 25,000 per 8-hour shift. Some of Britain's "beautiful bombs" arc handled at the factory where tiny jet sprays designed to a half-thousandth of an inch give an inside coating to protect the metal from the action of explosive chemicals. The coating has to be exactly even, and the machine cuts out 'automatically when the job is finished. Before the war there were no women among the 40 hands employed at the factory; now 40 of the 100 people Avorking there are women. Before the war, one girl checker who. is even more critical of the work than the Government inspectors, was working on leather handbags.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BPB19420629.2.19

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 05, Issue 71, 29 June 1942, Page 5

Word count
Tapeke kupu
291

WAR PAINT Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 05, Issue 71, 29 June 1942, Page 5

WAR PAINT Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 05, Issue 71, 29 June 1942, Page 5

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