Lectures on Popular and Scientific Subjects by Earl of Caithness John Sutherland Sinclair
page 95 of 109 (87%)
page 95 of 109 (87%)
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minutes for emptying and charging the press, the process of expressing
the oil takes only three minutes in all; and it is done by this press in this brief time in the most effectual manner. The oil, as it is expressed, passes through the canvas and hair bags to a cistern, known as the spill-tank, which is just large enough to contain the produce of one day's working. The presses are worked by oil instead of water, as it keeps both presses and pumps in better order. Each of them will produce 36 cwts. of cake per day of eleven hours, while the yield of oil is about 14 cwts. The oil is pumped from the spill-tanks to larger ones, capable of holding from 25 to 100 tons, where it remains for some time in order to settle previously to being brought to the market. I do not intend to enter into the relative merits of the various presses, but content myself with having explained to you the manner in which the oil is produced. Before concluding, it may be interesting to give you some idea of the vast extent of this manufacture. It appears, according to the official returns, that in the year 1841 we imported 364,000 quarters of seed. THE OIL FROM LINSEED. ______________________________________________________ | 1842 | 368,000 | 1847 | 439,000 | 1852 | 800,000 | | 1843 | 470,000 | 1848 | 799,000 | 1853 | 1,000,000 | | 1844 | 616,000 | 1849 | 626,000 | 1854 | 828,000 | | 1845 | 666,000 | 1850 | 668,000 | 1855 | 757,000 | | 1846 | 506,000 | 1851 | 630,000 | 1856 | 1,100,000 | ______________________________________________________ |
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