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CHAPTER VIII

IMPROVEMENTS IN GLASS MANUFACTURE

Optical Glass -- Experiments with viscid fluids -- Furnace for making optical Glass -- Mixing materials for Glass-making -- Open-Hearth Glass Furnace -- Continuous Sheet Glass Furnace -- Interview with Mr. Chance -- Project for glass works in London -- Pneumatic Glass Polishing Table -- Silvering Glass Mirrors

Returned once more to dear old Baxter House, I came face to face with the débris of former mechanical investigations piled up here and there in some of the outbuildings, where quantities of old glass pots, and the ruins of a pair of large furnaces, lay scattered among heaps of wheels and pulleys on long shafts, and fragments of old iron framing. Each single piece of this wild mass brought back to memory the particular part it had played in one of those fierce contests with the mechanical powers, in which it may have come off victoriously, or, through want of foresight of the guiding mind, have been ignominiously beaten, to remain a mute witness to the shortcomings of so many plausible theories. Few men have made more mistakes than I have; perhaps there are few men who have so boldly grappled with absolutely novel problems about which no published data existed to guide and modify the first ideas whence all elaborate mechanical structures naturally spring, just as a plant does from its seed. There were many remains in this old storehouse which reminded me of investigations, interesting enough in themselves, but which I must leave wholly unmentioned if I am ever to arrive in this imperfect history at that part of my life's most energetic labours in which my colleagues of the Iron and Steel Institute are more immediately interested. So I must hasten on, and, in mercy to them, leave unsaid so much that I should have to tell if the limits of my little history, and the kind patience of my readers, permitted me to inflict it on them. The ventilation of mines by my combined steam fan, the centrifugal pumps which formed so interesting an exhibit in the International Exhibition of 1851; the compression of pure bituminous coal rendered plastic by superheated steam, and pressed into rectangular polished blocks by a continuous feeding and continuous discharge from a machine similar to the cane press: these and several other minor inventions must be passed over.

But there is one subject of deep interest that I desire to save from absolute oblivion, since its record may at some future time set some active and ingenious mind to work on the lines briefly indicated, and thus add another triumph to the many lately achieved in the domain of optical science.

For some years previous to the period of which I am writing, I was deeply interested in the question of "burning glasses," such as those of Buffon, Parker, and others; my aim being to construct an instrument of sufficient power to act on several ounces, instead of several grains, of the material, which was to be operated upon in crucibles, into which the focus of the lens was directed. In following up this idea, my attention was naturally turned to the enormous difficulty of producing perfectly homogeneous discs of optical glass of large diameters. Fraunhöfer's magnificent lenses of small size had for many years attracted universal admiration, and learned societies were intent on further investigation of the subject. Thus it was that Faraday commenced an enquiry which only ended in failure.

Fraunhöfer's system of manufacture was at that time a profound secret, and the small discs of glass which he sold at fabulous prices were the envy of all other optical glass makers. Faraday, whose scientific knowledge and attainments pointed him out as the most likely scientist to succeed in this new field of enquiry, was, I doubt not, led absolutely astray by the appearance of Fraunhöfer's small discs; had Faraday never seen one of them, and been left to his own resources, he would most probably have succeeded.

The small discs produced by Fraunhöfer, four or five inches in diameter and from half to three-quarters of an inch in thickness, showed what really appeared to be incontrovertible evidence that they were made in small open flat dishes, of the form shown in Fig. 21, page 102.

Section of Fireclay Saucer and Glass Disc

These little cakes of glass, a, had a flat shining upper surface, evidently the natural, or fire, polish, as it is called, and were rounded at the top edges as shown at b, the periphery of the flat cake and its lower surface having the unmistakeable impress of the shallow fireclay dish shown in section at c. These apparently irresistible proofs that the glass was made in small quantities, and was very fusible and very fluid, no doubt deceived Faraday, and so misdirected his experiments as to lead to failure; all of which became self-evident when the mode of producing these little cakes was known. Glass made in large pots and at the highest attainable temperature is only semi-fluid, and is found to be of different densities in the upper and lower portions of the mass, owing to the varying specific gravities of its constituents. A partial admixture slowly going on in consequence of unequal expansion by heat in so bad a conductor as glass, and the motion induced by air bubbles slowly rising to the surface, have the effect of introducing veins, or striæ, consisting of streaks of more or less dense portions carried upwards by the rising air bubbles, running throughout the general mass, and entirely spoiling it for optical purposes. Now Fraunhöfer, knowing no means of preventing the formation of these veins or striæ, proceeded on this simple but laborious mode of counteracting these defects. He made a large potful of glass as perfect as he could by simple fusion; he allowed it to get cold in the pot; he then sawed the mass horizontally into slices, polished their surfaces, and thus examined their internal structure; and wherever there was a line or streak of more or less dense glass, the defective part was applied to a glass-grinder's wheel and cut away, not as a deep narrow notch but by a wide shallow indent; the surface was again polished for re-examination, and this process was repeated until no more veins, or striæ, were visible. The mutilated and indented disc of glass, sometimes cut nearly half-way through, was then put into one of the shallow fireclay dishes already described, gently heated at first, and finally made sufficiently soft to sink down and acquire the form and dimensions of the dish, the impress of whose surface it bore, while its upper surface assumed the polished appearance of ordinary molten glass.

What I desired to achieve was the production, at a small cost, of large and massive discs or lenses, which could not be produced by Fraunhöfer's system. Among the several plans I proposed, I will describe only two, each of which attacked the problem from an entirely different standpoint. First, I may mention that I made a series of laboratory experiments with viscid transparent fluids, contained in glass vessels of various forms and under varied conditions. Venice turpentine was first tried, but very viscid castor oil was the nearest to glass in its indications of movement within itself. Small grains of broken red sealing-wax, by their greater specific gravity, showed well the tendency of the oxide of lead (used in flint glass) to subside; and how, by rotating this vessel with one small fragment of sealing-wax, its movement was restrained within a circle the diameter of which was equal to the subsidence of the particle during a semi-rotation of the vessel containing the oil. The effect of the gentle rotation or rolling of the vessel was also experimented on in various ways. A small portion of the viscid oil was poured out, and a very minute quantity of blue powder ground up in it, just enough to give a faint blue colour. This blue oil was then poured back again into the nearly globular-shaped glass vessel, which must be considered as the glass pot; a little movement of the vessel produced streaks of blue colour like veins in marble, dispersed throughout the general mass of viscid fluid. But by continuing to roll the glass globe slowly for about two or three hours, not the slightest trace of veins or streaks of blue remained visible, while a very slight tint of blue pervaded the whole mass of oil, which was now perfectly homogeneous. It will be observed that the motion so given to the whole mass did not divide it, as the insertion of a stirrer would have done. I also demonstrated the fact that stirring from the surface by a rod was wholly impossible without the introduction of air in large quantities. So extraordinary is this fact that I cannot refrain from putting it on record. Take a glass jar or vessel, say ten inches deep and two inches in diameter, open at the top and closed at the bottom, as shown in Figs. 22 and 23, on page 104. Nearly fill it with clear, but viscid, castor oil, carefully removing all traces of air from the fluid by exhaustion under the glass bell of a common air-pump; place the jar on a table, take a polished metal, or, preferably, a glass, rod about the size of a blacklead pencil, and having a smooth, rounded end, wipe it, and very slowly and steadily lower it some six inches into the oil, as shown in Fig. 22; then as slowly and carefully withdraw it, occupying quite a minute in doing so. There will remain no trace that anything has entered the oil. Now place the jar again under the bell of the air-pump, take a few strokes with it, and there will appear a line of ill-defined mist, standing vertically upwards about six inches in height in the centre of the jar; at each stroke of the pump it becomes more visible, and enlarges in diameter. It soon assumes the appearance of innumerable little globes, like the hard roe of a herring, as shown at Fig. 23. A little more exhaustion, and these still further expand and rush upwards by the thousand, until at last all the air adhering to, and taken down by, the glass rod has been removed. What you may do, and what you may not do, with molten glass was thus beautifully illustrated by some of these preliminary experiments with viscid fluids. You may move the glass about; you may rotate these viscid fluids in a closed vessel; and you may even pour them, provided the last part of your stream does not fall on the poured-out mass.

Experiment showing Air Carried into a Viscid Fluid by a Stirrer

To return to actual glass, the subject divides itself into two main systems of procedure, viz., you may make glass by the fusion of pure silica, lime, and potash, or other alkali, with or without the addition of a considerable quantity of oxide of lead, which is used where great density and refractive power are required. Then it becomes more desirable that an intimate mixture of the materials should take place, and throughout the twelve to twenty hours required for fusion, no subsidence of the heavy portions of the mixture, or flotation of the lighter ones, should be suffered to take place, or a homogeneous mass will not be obtained. It is manifestly easy to remove the heavy, sweet particles from the lower part of a cup of tea by one or two gentle movements of a spoon, and so get the whole cup of fluid equally sweet, but we have been warned by our oil experiment that the fluid glass must not be stirred by a rod or we introduce air; and if we wait long enough for the air slowly to find its way again to the surface, we inevitably have an interval in which the difference in specific gravity of the several materials will assert itself, and we get subsidence, lose the homogeneity of the mass, and all our stirring will have been in vain. The outcome of these and other observed conditions was the proposal to employ oscillating, semi-rotating, or continuous slow-rotating melting crucibles, the latter being preferred. The crucibles and the proper kind of furnace for this purpose may be largely varied; one of the simple forms is given in Fig. 24, Plate IX.; its leading features are representative of all the others.

Furnace for Making Optical Glass

The furnace there shown consists of a cylindrical casing of iron, A, lined with firebrick, B; it is divided into two chambers, the lower one, C, being provided with firebars on which the fuel rests; while the upper chamber, D, is cylindrical in form with a curved roof, having an opening at J formed in a circular piece of moulded firebrick J*, which is removed when putting in the rotating crucible H. Above the opening, J, is a suspended hood, E, which communicates with a tall chimney; the lower part of the chamber, D, is conical in form, having a small central opening, F, and four larger cylindrical openings, G, surrounding it, each of which communicates with the fire chamber, C, and allows the flame to ascend and play up and around the crucible, H. This crucible is conical in form both above and below its largest diameter, and terminates in a raised neck or mouth at H*; the furnace, A, is suspended on axes, occupying the position indicated by the letter M; these axes are fitted to a strong iron ring or hoop, N, which surrounds the furnace, and is itself supported on the axes, P, which rest on iron frames, O.

The axes, P, are placed at right angles to the axes, M, so as to allow the crucible to roll or gyrate on its axis, its upper and lower ends moving in a circular path. It will be observed that the crucible, H, rests on one of its sides on the conical floor of the chamber, D, and is kept in position by its lower spherical end, M, moving in the cylindrical opening, E. Now if the furnace be moved quietly on its axis, the crucible gravitating to the lowest inclined side of the conical surface on which it rests, will roll round on its own axis so long as the furnace is kept in motion. This motion of the furnace may be easily effected by means of a short-throw half-crank on a vertical axis passing upward through the floor in a line through the centre of the furnace, the crank-pin having a spherical end fitting into the cylindrical socket projecting downwards from the underside of the ashpit. The motion of the furnace should be very slow, so as to give about one revolution of the crucible in five or ten minutes, and thus allow a constant movement of the whole of the material to take place without dividing or breaking the continuity of the mass, preventing any subsidence of the heavier particles, and securing the perfect homogeneity of the whole. When the fusion and mixing is judged to be complete, the crucible can be pushed with a rod into an upright position, and, by drawing the fire, cooled as rapidly as possible by the current of air flowing through the furnace.

Homogenous optical glass, free from those long "wreaths" or lines of varying density, so common in ordinary glass, was also proposed to be made in the following manner. A large potful of glass of the required composition must be allowed to get cold, and then broken up, the central portions only being selected for use. These pieces are to be crushed, all the glass being reduced to absolute powder, and separated by sifting; all pieces exceeding the size of a grain of rice should be rejected. The very small and nearly equally-sized fragments that remain are then to be carefully washed in distilled water and put into a lenticular-shaped crucible, the exterior surface of which should be glazed, so as to render it impervious and air-tight. The crucible having been put into a suitable furnace and gradually heated, a small platinum pipe communicating with the upper part of the crucible is also connected with an exhaust pump, so as to remove every particle of air from the crucible and from between the granules of glass while these still retain their granular condition. As soon as the glass becomes fluid, it forms a homogenous mass, the law of diffusion equalising any minute differences in composition of continuous grains, while wholly avoiding those long "wreaths" or streaks so fatal in large masses of glass. On the strength of these crude notions a number of various-shaped clay crucibles were ordered to be made, with a view to carry on an elaborate series of experiments on the lines indicated; but as these crucibles required at least three months to dry, I had ample time to pursue some other interesting investigations relative to the production of glass for ordinary commercial purposes.

In going over a glass-works some years previously, I had noticed what I, at the moment, thought was a great oversight in the mode of proceeding. The materials employed, viz., sand, lime, and soda in ascertained quantities, were laid in heaps upon the paved floor of the glasshouse, and a labourer proceeded to shovel them into one large heap, turning over the powdered materials, and mixing them together; a certain quantity of oxide of manganese was added during the general mixing operation, for the purpose of neutralising the green colour given to glass by the small amount of oxide of iron contained in the sand. The materials were then thrown into the large glass pots, which were already red-hot inside the furnace. What appeared to me to be wanting in this rough-and-ready operation was a far more intimate blending of these dry materials. A grain of sand lying by itself is infusible at the highest temperature attainable in a glass pot, and the same may be said of a small lump of lime; but both are soluble in alkali, if it be within their reach. These dry powders do not make excursions in a glass pot and look about for each other, and if they lie separated the time required for the whole to pass into a state of solution will greatly depend on their mutual contact. In such matters I always reason by analogy, and look for confirmation of my views to other manufactures or processes with which I may happen to have become more or less acquainted. I may here remark that I have always adopted a different reading of the old proverb "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing"; this may indeed be true, if your knowledge is equally small on all subjects; but I have found a little knowledge on a great many different things of infinite service to me. From my early youth I had a strong desire to know something of any and all the varied manufactures to which I have been able to gain access, and I have always felt a sort of annoyance whenever any subject connected with manufacture was mooted of which I knew absolutely nothing. The result of this feeling, acting for a great many years on a powerful memory, has been that I have really come to know this dangerous little of a very great many industrial processes.

I have been led into this long digression because I meant to illustrate my observations on the extreme slowness of the fusion of glass by an analogy in the manufacture of gunpowder. I have shown how impossible it is for the dry powdered materials employed in the formation of glass to chemically react upon each other when they are lying far apart. Now, if we take the three substances -- charcoal, nitre, and sulphur, of which gunpowder is composed, and break them into small fragments, then shake them loosely together, and put a pound or two of this mixture on a stone floor and apply a match, the nitre will fizzle a little briskly; the sulphur will burn fitfully or go out, and the charcoal will last several minutes before it is consumed. If, instead of this crude and imperfect mixture, we take the trouble to grind these matters under edge-stones into a fine paste with water, and then dry and granulate it, we have still the precise chemical elements to deal with as we set fire to on the stone floor; but they now exist in such close and intimate contact as to instantly act upon each other, and a ton or two of these otherwise slow-burning materials will be converted into gas in a fraction of a second. The inference I drew from this analogy was simple enough, viz.: grind together the materials required to form glass, and when the heat of the furnace arrives at the point at which decomposition takes place, the whole will pass into the state of fluid glass much more quickly, and will yield a more truly homogenous glass than is obtained in the usual manner.

I was at this time engaged in constructing a large reverberatory furnace for the fusion of glass on the open hearth, and I may forestall what I have to say respecting this mode of founding glass, by stating that when I employed a mixture of raw material merely shovelled into the bath as practised in ordinary glass-making, it took from ten to twelve hours to fuse half a ton of sand and lime in my new furnace; but when I took precisely the same quantity and quality of materials which had been reduced to a uniform powder, as fine as flour, by grinding the mixed materials under edge stones, my glass, instead of requiring ten or twelve hours for fusion, became beautifully fluid in four and a-half to five hours. When I first tried this fine ground material in my furnace, I patiently watched the whole process hour after hour; the inert mass of dry white powder lay quietly under the rushing current of flame passing over it, without showing any symptom of fusion. At last I sought relief for my over-fatigued eyes by half an hour's turn up and down the yard; and on my return into the glass-house, I was astonished to hear a curious sound issuing from the furnace, closely resembling the noise given out by a frying-pan when cooking fish; on the application of my eye to the peep-hole of the furnace, I saw that the level of the glass had risen an inch or two, and that a rapid boiling was going on, caused by the disengagement of gas resulting from the rapid reaction of soda on the silicic acid. I scarcely need say how greatly I was pleased at witnessing in a first experiment so important a result, and so distinct an example of the value of a little of this so-called "dangerous knowledge."

Up to this period the fusion of glass in large crucibles was universal, and the reverberatory furnace which I had erected at Baxter House for this purpose was the first in which glass was made on an open hearth, and the parent of all those bottle furnaces in which the fusion of glass is carried on in open tanks. It was here also that the hollow box roof was first used in reverberatory furnaces -- a form of roof afterwards employed by me so economically in the reverberatory melting furnaces used in the early days of the Bessemer steel manufacture. The immense economy, in time, consumption of fuel, and cost of large melting-pots, resulting from the fusion of glass on the open hearth of a reverberatory furnace was accompanied by one great disadvantage, viz ., the tendency of molten matter to fall from the roof of the furnace into the bath, and thus spoil the glass. It was found that whenever the underside of the furnace roof was exposed to an excessively high temperature, the alkaline vapours from the bath beneath caused a fusion of the brickwork, and tears, with their long tails, would fall slowly from above and discolour the glass in the bath beneath. It was mainly to counteract this injurious action that I invented the thin box roof which entirely cured this defect, while the durability of the furnace arch was at least four to one as compared to the ordinary solid form. How well I still remember the trouble and anxiety these tears from the roof caused me, and how I watched through the eye-holes of the furnace the effects of the alkaline vapours on the hollow box roof when it was first under trial. I looked ceaselessly into the fierce glare of the furnace, with but a piece of thick glass between my eye and the bright molten mass, only eighteen or twenty inches distant. When watching by the hour at a time to see if a single tear was formed on the roof, the eye accommodated itself to the intense light, and all within that glorious mass of incandescent matter could be seen in its minutest details. I remember one peculiar circumstance that stood out from all the rest; while one of the hollow firebricks of the roof was in a condition of plastic clay, the brickmaker had taken hold of it, and a hollow caused by his thumb was beautifully delineated on the underside of this particular brick; it happened to be opposite the eye-hole, and was an excellent mark whereby any change in the state of the roof could, from time to time, be observed. This must have been as far back as 1847, but that thumb-mark is as indelibly impressed on my memory as it was on the plastic clay. How many hours in succession I have watched that mark through the fierce heat and blinding light of the incandescent furnace I cannot now take upon myself to say, but my whole heart and mind were so absorbed in the investigation that I never gave a thought to the fearful risk I ran of destroying my sight. Now, when I recall these facts vividly to memory, I can realise the folly I was guilty of, and can, in all humility, thank Heaven that I am not at this moment a blind old man.

It is now just forty-nine years since I succeeded in fusing the materials used in the manufacture of glass on the open hearth of a reverberatory furnace, in about one-third the time and with one-third the fuel required for its fusion in the large and expensive glass pots then in use. But there was still one great desideratum: the glass fused in pots was usually blown into long round-ended cylinders or muffs, the ends of which had to be opened while the glass was still hot and plastic -- an operation requiring great skill and dexterity on the part of the glass-blower. These open-ended cylinders, when cold, were slit from end to end by a diamond, and again heated until sufficiently soft to be spread out flat on the smooth stone bed of a furnace specially constructed for that purpose; after which they had to be ground and polished, if made into what is known as patent plate.

Now, what I proposed to do, instead of this slow, laborious, and expensive series of operations, was simply to allow the semi-fluid molten glass to escape by an opening extending along the whole length of the bath, and about 1 1/2 in. in width, and to flow gently between a pair of cold iron rollers, so as to determine its breadth and thickness at a single operation. I aimed at converting the whole contents of the furnace into one continuous sheet of glass in ten or fifteen minutes, wholly without skilled manipulation of any kind, or the employment of the other furnaces, which are necessary for opening and spreading the blown cylinders before referred to. It will be obvious that the continuous sheet as it passed from the rolls might be cut into any desired lengths, and thus very much larger sheet glass could be made than it was possible to obtain by blowing it into cylinders.

Having thus foreshadowed the design I had in view, I will briefly explain the nature of the apparatus which I erected at Baxter House to test the practicability of the scheme; and for this purpose I give the engravings, Figs. 25 and 26, Plate X, by way of illustration.

Furnace and Rolls for making Continuous Sheet Glass

Fig. 25 is a cross-section taken through the centre of the bath of the reverberatory furnace, looking towards the fire-bridge A, over which the flame passes. This flame is deflected downward on to the molten glass B, occupying the hearth of the furnace C, which is a sort of rectangular tank, having all along one side a slot or opening D, against which an iron bar E is fixed, so as to close the slot and prevent the escape of the semi-fluid glass. The arched roof, F, of the furnace is formed of hollow boxes of firebrick, each box having a round opening in each of four of its sides, while the upper side is quite open and the lower one closed, and forms the underside of the furnace roof.

In the front of the furnace is a cast-iron door frame D, lined with firebrick. It extends the whole length of the tank in which the glass is melted, and it is removed from its position when necessary, by slings from a jib-crane attached to hooks H, which project from each end of the frame. The flame, after passing over the glass materials in the bath, travels downwards to an underground flue connected to a tall chimney-shaft. There is also a narrow passage I, running downward into the same underground flue, and extending upwards, as shown at I*, so as to admit a current of flame, as indicated by arrows in front of the opening D, and round the curved underlip C* of the cistern C, in order to keep all the front part of the cistern in a highly-heated state.

In front of the furnace a rolling machine is fitted to a suitable slide, so that it may be removed from the furnace a short distance, as shown in Fig. 25, which is a side elevation of the apparatus. It consists of a pair of smooth cast-iron hollow rollers M and N, into which a current of cold water is allowed to flow through the pipes P and Q, and from which the water escapes by similar pipes at the other end of the rollers. A telescopic pipe R slides in and out of a fixed pipe S, and thus keeps up an uninterrupted communication with the water supply. The rollers are brought nearer together, or further apart, by means of screws T in the usual manner, and thus regulate the thickness of the sheet of glass.

Furnace and Rolls for making Continuous Sheet Glass

Fig. 26 represents in section the furnace, from which the large fire-door has been removed; the rolling machine has also been moved along its slide, until its lower roller N is in almost close contact with the lip C* of the melting cistern; this movement is effected by turning the handle U, which actuates the wheel V, and the rack W, and moves the whole rolling apparatus into position. When this has been done, the rollers are thrown into gear with a shaft, not shown in the drawings, and are caused to revolve at the desired speed. As soon as the machine has been thrown into gear the iron bar E is withdrawn, when a slowly-moving, white-hot, semi-fluid mass creeps out of the long slot, and coming into contact with the lower revolving roll N, is moved by it into the space between the rolls, and is compressed into a thin continuous sheet from an eighth to a quarter of an inch in thickness, as desired; a projecting V-shaped rib on the upper roller M, will cut the glass into lengths equal to its circumference. The sheet of glass thus severed from the general mass will rapidly slide down the smooth curved surface X of the machine, and deposit itself on the flat stone bed at the foot of the incline, from which it may be transferred into a suitable annealing oven. It will be understood that, as soon as the bath is empty, the rolling machine will be run back on its slide to the position shown in Fig. 25. The bar E and the door G will then be replaced, the bath charged with a fresh supply of raw material, and the process be repeated as soon as the glass is in the proper condition.

From this general description of the process, and the simple mechanism employed, it will be seen that a large quantity of glass could be produced with a very small plant. Thus, suppose that the glass materials are melted in five hours and that the time of casting is, say, fifteen minutes, a cast would easily be made every six hours, or four times per day. A bath only 4 ft. by 3 ft. in area, and 12 in. deep, when making strong horticultural glass 1/10th in. thick, would yield theoretically 5,760ft. per day (say 5,000), equal to, at least, 400 blown cylinders 4 ft. long by 1 ft. in diameter.

I was quietly pursuing my experiments with the apparatus described, when I was unexpectedly called upon by an eminent glass-manufacturer. He said that he had heard that I was doing something novel in the production of sheet glass, and if my patent was secured, he should much like to know what was the nature of the invention. I told him my patent was secure, and that I should be happy to give him a general outline of the scheme. He was greatly interested, and the shadows of the evening had imperceptibly fallen upon us in my little private room before my visitor rose to depart. He was very desirous to see the experimental apparatus; and knowing that my guest, Mr. Lucas Chance, was at the head of the largest glass-works in the kingdom, and worthy of all confidence, I acquiesced in his strongly-expressed desire, and said if he would call again the next day at noon, I would have a charge of glass ready to roll into sheet in his presence.

The following morning, all was got in readiness for a cast. Mr. Chance critically examined the rolling apparatus, and looked into the furnace from time to time, just as a man would who thoroughly knew what he was about; and when I said we had better now get to work, there were myself, Mr. W. D. Allen, my eldest son Henry, a carpenter, and my engine-driver present in the small room in which the furnace and machine had been erected. As soon as the bar retaining the charge was removed, and the tenacious semi-fluid glass touched the lower roll, the thick round edge of the slowly-moving mass became engaged in the narrow space, where the second roll took hold of it, and the bright continuous sheet descended the inclined surface, darkening as it cooled slightly. I had intentionally omitted the cutter in the roll so as to make a continuous sheet; this had to be pulled away, for my little room was not half long enough to accommodate it. The heat suddenly thrown off from so large a white-hot surface threatened our garments if we stood too near, and unfortunately some oily cotton waste took fire, causing a momentary panic. Mr. Chance called out, "Cease the operation; cease the operation!" We were all in a perspiration, and the long adhesive sheet of glass, 70 ft. long by 2 1/2 ft. wide, was gathered up before the door. The heat was very great, and throwing the rolls out of gear, we all beat a hasty retreat. However, as far as the rapid formation of thin sheet-glass was concerned, there could be no doubt whatever, and I and my visitor sat down quietly to cool ourselves, and think over what had taken place. Notwithstanding the mistake of not putting in the cutter, and making the glass into small sheets, I had the satisfaction of knowing that I had just made a sheet of glass more than three times the length of the longest piece that had ever been produced, and that Mr. Chance had seen, for the first time in his life, a continuous sheet of glass flowing from a machine, wholly without any skilled manipulation. "Well," said Mr. Chance, "you have gone a good way, but you have much further to go yet before you touch the real point -- the commercial point. Now it has struck me that we have so many appliances, and so many skilled employes in all departments, that perfecting such a novel process must be more easy and less expensive to us than it can be to you. After all, should it not become so perfect as to be a commercial success, or should some other way be found of effecting the same result, you might have all your labour in vain; but I freely admit that you have done enough to constitute an actual value as the invention now stands. Just think it over, and determine whether you will sell me your invention as it stands and make at once a profit on what you have done, or whether you will spend more labour and money with the chance of much greater remuneration, if you succeed commercially, and no one else supersedes you? I am going down to Birmingham this evening by the 9 P.M. train. Dine with me at seven o'clock at the Euston Hotel, and tell me, yes or no, whether you are disposed to sell your invention in its present state." With this he took his leave, and I had still three hours to reflect over a most unlooked-for proposition. It was very exciting, and I talked the matter over with Mrs. Bessemer, and the general consensus of opinion was: "Realise, by all means, if you can get an adequate amount, but don't give it away." This decision, however, was a long way off a positive fixed sum, to which a "yes" or "no" was to be uttered by both sides. Time slipped on, and when the clock struck seven I found myself in a snug private room at the Euston Hotel. We had a nice little dinner, and, when the table was cleared, my host said: "Well, have you decided?" I said that I had thought the matter over, and felt that any sum must now be a sacrifice, but that I was prepared to sell on one condition, viz., there was to be no discussion of price. I would name what I had fixed on; would he give me a simple yes or no? To this he agreed, and then I said, "The sum I have fixed on is six thousand pounds." "Well," said Mr. Chance, "I will give you that sum for your patent; I shall not go down to Birmingham to-night, and tomorrow at 11 A.M., if you will call at Messrs. Hooper and Co.'s, my solicitors, in Sackville Street, we can settle the whole matter there and then." We met as arranged, a short agreement was drawn up, Mr. Chance handed me a cheque for £1,000 with a short-dated bill for £5,000, and we parted very good friends, mutually pleased with our bargain.

As a fitting tribute to the memory of Mr. Chance's able solicitor, Mr. Hooper, I may mention that I found him so shrewd and careful of his client, and so just withal, that I from that day gave his firm all my legal business as far as patents were concerned.

At this period I was deeply interested, from a scientific point of view, in the plate-glass manufacture. I was, and ever shall be, a great admirer of plate glass, which I hold to be one of the most beautiful and most marvellous productions of all our varied manufactures; and I must confess that, at the present day, I am disgusted with that idiotic fashion which rejects this splendid production for the small lead panes of a greenish bubbly glass, which, with difficulty is now made bad enough to imitate the early and most imperfect state of the glass manufacture; and which the bad taste -- or rather the absence of taste of the present generation admires and "tries to live up to."

It need not, therefore, be a matter of surprise that I felt a strong desire to cheapen and facilitate the production of plate glass, a manufacture which, in my enthusiasm, I attacked at all points, beginning with the preparation, sorting, cleansing and blending of the raw materials employed, followed by the novel device of a circular reverberatory furnace, in which the founding pots were arranged in a large circular chamber surmounted by a flatly-curved dome. There were also similar furnaces designed for refining the glass, having a crane revolving with the reverberatory dome of the furnace. The crane was, in fact, a veritable automaton, that would remove the one small cover, which, as the dome revolved, gave access in turn to a dozen large glass pots placed in a circle. The three arms or grips of the crane descended vertically into the furnace, and brought up the huge crucible, and when emptied, replaced it in three or four minutes, within half an inch of the exact spot whence it had been lifted. The casting table and all the annealing ovens were arranged in a circle, all accessible from a circular railway laid down in the great casting hall. I may also mention that every detail of the grinding and polishing machinery had undergone an entire change, rendering these operations more rapid and more accurate.

I feel, however, that I dare not trouble my readers by entering into further details. Suffice it to say that a revolution in the appliances and mode of working pervaded the whole manufacture, to properly describe which would fill an illustrated volume. Various portions of the scheme were practically tested; I built a circular furnace for six large pots and erected the automatic crane before referred to, which, like a living thing, dived for a minute or two into the raging heat, and brought forth noiselessly the pot of molten glass (as easily as the human hand could take a tumbler of water off the table), and returned it empty to the same spot.

I was well satisfied with the whole scheme, and wished a few friends to join me in the erection of a plate-glass works in London. My partner, Mr. Robert Longsdon, with his usual architectural skill and good taste, designed the necessary buildings for a complete works, embodying all the novel modes of conducting each department of the manufacture. On Plate XI., in Figs. 27 and 28, illustrations, showing an elevation and section of his design are given, just to save the whole project from oblivion. I have, at this moment, no sort of doubt that, had I convinced others of one-fourth of the improvements embodied in this new scheme, there would have been no difficulty in finding privately a few friends who would have joined their capital to mine, and the works would have been started. But it is difficult to impress one's ideas on others, and I desired to have the personal and entire conviction of its value on the part of all those I asked to join me in the enterprise; without this I was resolved not to move further in the matter, and failing to obtain it, the whole scheme was abandoned.

Elevation and Section of Glass Works Designed by Mr. Longsdon

There is one point in connection with patented inventions upon which I have always felt strongly. I have maintained that the public derive a great advantage by useful inventions being patented, because the invention so secured is valuable property, and the owner is necessarily desirous of turning that property to the greatest advantage; he either himself manufactures the patented article, or he grants licenses to others to do so. In either ease the public reap the advantage of being able to purchase a better or a cheaper article than was before known to them, due to the inventor's perseverance in forcing his property upon the market. But if a novel article or manufacture is simply proposed by a writer, and published in the technical press or in newspapers, as a rule (almost without a single exception) no manufacturer will go to the trouble and expense of trying to work out the proposed invention. He says to himself: "I shall not risk the expense necessary to develop this new idea, for it may entirely fail; or even if I succeed, its development will cost me much more than it will cost other manufacturers, who will immediately avail themselves of it if I succeed; no, let some one else try it;" and so the invention is lost to the world in consequence of having been given away. This loss to the public is equally the case with patents that are not taken up; and one of the simplest and most effective inventions which I ever made may be here cited as an example, as it formed part of the novel system of plate-glass manufacture just referred to. When a sheet of plate glass some 10 ft. or 12 ft. long and 6 ft. or 7 ft. wide has been ground perfectly flat on both sides, it is still dull and grey, and has to be polished. For this purpose it is usual to fix it firmly on to a large stone polishing table, so that the powerful alternate pushing and pulling of the polishing rubbers over its surface may not break or displace the sheet. To do this a large quantity of plaster-of-Paris is mixed with water, and spread as quickly as possible over the surface of a stone table much larger than a billiard table. Then the sheet of glass is dexterously laid upon the semi-fluid plaster, and carefully bedded by expert workmen so as to be well supported at all parts of its extensive surface; the superfluous plaster lying beyond the edges of the plate of glass is then scraped away. The polishing machine must remain idle until the plaster is sufficiently firm and hard to retain the glass safely in place. Care must also be taken to thoroughly remove all smears of plaster around the edges and any splashes on the surface, for the plaster is always more or less gritty, and one or two particles of sharp grit will play havoc with the polished surface, scratching it terribly. Let us suppose that one side of the great glass sheet has been polished. It is then necessary to unbed it, and this requires much skill. A man at each corner inserts a thin blade of steel and gently prises the sheet up; he must not spring it much, or the corner will snap off, and considerably diminish the size of the sheet when squared up. With much risk and trouble, the plate of glass is eventually released, and lifted off the stone bed; then the workmen proceed to chip off the hard plaster which firmly adheres to the table. This makes a great mess all round the polishing machine by the flying about of chips of plaster. The stone table having been chipped all over, and scraped quite clean, a fresh lot of plaster is again mixed up, dexterously spread, and the sheet of glass, with its unpolished surface uppermost, is again bedded on the table, and all superfluous surrounding plaster carefully cleared away. Again the powerful polishing machine remains inactive, until the sheet of glass is firmly stuck to the bed, and, after polishing, the same dangerous process of springing the glass loose from the table has to be repeated. After its removal, the bed has to be chipped all over, and the hard coating of the plaster-of-paris removed, for the reception of another plate.

Bessemer's Pneumatic Polishing Table for Plate Glass

Such is the laborious, dirty, and risky process to which every sheet of plate glass is subjected in the ordinary course of its manufacture. Now let us see what was the simple mode which I patented of holding down a sheet of plate glass securely during the polishing process. I employed (see Figs. 29 to 32, page 120) a cast-iron ribbed plate of the size of the polishing stone table, on the upper side of which a large slab of slate (such as is used for billiard tables) was supported and bedded on the ribs of the iron plate. This surface was then ground flat, in the same manner as plate glass, the space beneath the slate and between the iron ribs forming a shallow box. A number of round holes of about a quarter of an inch in diameter were made through the slab of slate all over its surface, at a distance of 4 in. or 5 in. apart, so that air could enter the iron box freely from all parts of its surface; a pipe of 1 in. in diameter led to a steam jet or other exhauster, so that air could be withdrawn from the box or let into it by a small hand-tap, as desired. This, then, was the whole apparatus which constituted the invention; it was extremely inexpensive, and once made, almost indestructible.

This device took the place of the stone table under the ordinary polishing machine. Its operation may be described as follows:-- The sheet of glass to be polished is gently slid upon the table, and covers all the small holes in the slate bed; and if then the small tap which connects the underside of the slate table with the steam jet or other exhaust apparatus is turned on, a partial vacuum is formed beneath the sheet of glass, and it becomes in an instant immovably fixed and adherent to the slate bed on which it rests. There is no plaster employed, and consequently none of the mess or labour attending its mixture and chipping off; there is no delay in the use of the polishing machine while the plaster is becoming hard, or when it is being cleared away. The plate of glass is an absolute fixture in less than a quarter of a minute after the exhaust is turned on; and it is as rapidly released by reversing the tap and readmitting the air to the box. The plate is then turned over, and the tap being opened to the exhaust, it instantly becomes re-fixed to the slate surface; there is no cost of plaster, there is no labour, and no risk of snapping off the corner of the plate to release it. Take a moderate sized plate of 6 ft. by 10 ft. (60 square feet), and take a very low exhaust, say, 2 lb. per square inch, equal to 288 lb. per foot or 17,280 lb. of atmospheric pressure, holding it immovably fixed. Every schoolboy who has seen how powerfully the glass bell of an air-pump is held in place by atmospheric pressure, must understand this simple, effective, cleanly, inexpensive, safe and rapid way of holding down a plate of glass.

This invention, which formed one item of the many improvements in the plate-glass manufacture which I did not carry out, has been available for the free and unrestricted use of the public for nearly fifty years, and yet no plate-glass works in this, or any other, country has taken advantage of it. The simple fact is that an invention must be nursed and tended as a mother nurses her baby, or it inevitably perishes. Nor is this almost incredible indifference to their interest the result of the invention being unknown to the public; for I exhibited a polishing table so constructed, among many other things, in the International Exhibition of 1851, where it became one of the most attractive of my exhibits. I well remember that on one occasion I was requested to be present two hours prior to the opening of the Exhibition to the public, and had the honour of showing and explaining the device to Her Most Gracious Majesty, who was on that occasion accompanied by His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales and other distinguished persons.

The slate table was about 4 ft. by 3 ft., and I used a plate of polished glass a little less than a square yard, weighing about 36 lb. The firm way in which it was held was most easily demonstrated by placing one side of the plate about four or five inches on the edge of the slate bed, and allowing the remainder to project. Not only did the atmospheric pressure sustain the plate overhanging in this way, but no one could lift it up or force it down. I was also able to illustrate a fact but little known, viz., that a plate of perfectly flat ground glass lying in absolute contact with a true plane surface cannot be smashed by a blow from a wooden mallet with a curved face. I have struck my yard-square sheet of glass at the Exhibition, when held down by atmospheric pressure, dozens of times before the public, as hard as I could strike it with a wooden mallet, and never broke a single sheet in doing so. If it lay hollow and not in absolute contact with the table, a child could fracture it in a dozen places, but when in contact all over its surface, no amount of force less than that at which glass crushes to powder will crack a properly supported sheet. From what I have said I think I have shown that, however self-evident an invention may be, or however advantageous it might be to a manufacturer, if it is public property he will not touch it.

I have already so far trespassed on the patience of my readers in reference to the manufacture of glass that I must bring these remarks to a close. But there is just one little point that I may be excused for mentioning; it has reference to the silvering of glass, which everyone knows was effected by the amalgamation with mercury of a large sheet of thin tinfoil, the amalgam adhering to the surface and remaining on the side next the glass, a beautifully-polished and highly-reflecting surface. But it had a bluish or leaden hue that was most unfavourable to the fair sex, and spoiled the best complexion. I thought much over this defect, and at last succeeded in greatly improving the whiteness of the reflection. This I effected by the use of pure silver powder. The sheet of tinfoil was employed as before, and amalgamated with mercury, the greater part of which was drained off the surface of the foil, and then pure silver in the form of an impalpable powder (known as silver-bronze powder), was freely dusted all over the amalgamated surface. The fine silver particles became rapidly amalgamated or dissolved by the mercury, and when the sheet of glass was slid on and pressure applied, an amalgam of pure silver coated the glass, greatly improving the brilliancy and colour of the mirror. This method seemed likely to have a great future, but before it got into use, a process suggested by Liebig some years before was developed and applied in a practical form by Professor Henry Draper. By this method of working, which he used for the silvering of glass mirrors for reflecting telescopes, Professor Draper entirely dispensed with the tinfoil and mercury process, and deposited pure silver direct on to the glass from its solution. This was a far more perfect mode than my own of putting pure silver on to the glass, and quite put an end to my process. At the present day all glass mirrors are silvered by one or the other of several modified forms of Leibig's admirable invention.


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