steam-jacketed love

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Examples

  • Fish glue can be made from skins and heads of fish by steaming fresh material over a perforated screen within a steam-jacketed vessel for about

    Chapter 9 1982

  • The next room is occupied with a number of steam-jacketed pans, a mill, and hydraulic presses.

    Scientific American Supplement, No. 643, April 28, 1888 Various

  • One cwt. of the fat is melted in a steam-jacketed pan, and poured into

    Scientific American Supplement, No. 643, April 28, 1888 Various

  • For a small batch, 56 lb. Cochin cocoa-nut oil and 56 lb. sweet edible tallow may be taken, melted at 130° F. (54° C.), and carefully strained into a small steam-jacketed pan.

    The Handbook of Soap Manufacture H. A. Appleton

  • In the former, saponification is carried out in a steam-jacketed vacuum chamber provided with an elaborate arrangement of stirrers; in the other process fat is allowed to fall in a thin stream into the amount of lye required for saponification, previously placed in the saponification vessel, which is provided with stirring gear.

    The Handbook of Soap Manufacture H. A. Appleton

  • The nitrate of ammonia is first dried and ground, and then heated in a closed steam-jacketed vessel to a temperature of 80° C., and the melted organic compound is added, and the whole stirred until an intimate mixture is obtained.

    Nitro-Explosives: A Practical Treatise

  • The more general method of drying the cotton is in steam-jacketed tubes, i.e., double cylinders of iron, some 5 feet long and 1-1/2 foot wide.

    Nitro-Explosives: A Practical Treatise

  • The cotton may either be placed upon shelves in a drying house, through which a current of hot air circulates, or dried in steam-jacketed cylinders.

    Nitro-Explosives: A Practical Treatise

  • a steam-jacketed pan, or pan provided with steam coils, and agitated.

    The Handbook of Soap Manufacture H. A. Appleton

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