A paper making machine with two continuous forming wires, rather than just one. Twin-wires were designed to create a less two-sided paper than manufactured on a Fourdrinier paper machine. Other techniques for reducing two-sidedness have since been developed, enabling paper manufactures to created paper on single-wire machines with little side-to-side variation.
A type of papermaking machine that has two wires instead of one for producing paper with less two-sidedness.
a paper machine that utilizes two wires to sandwich the furnish leaving the headbox allowing the pulp slurry to drain faster and creating paper with less two-sidedness
A paper machine with two wires instead of one producing paper with less two-sidedness. wo-sheet detector - In printing presses, a device for stopping or tripping the press when more than one sheet attempts to feed into the grippers.
A paper or board machine in which the paper web is formed and partially de-watered between two wires (see below for definition of wire).
A papermaking machine with two continuous forming wires rather than one. This is one method that paper manufacturers use to create paper with less side-to-side variation.
In papermaking, a fourdrinier paper machine with two wires instead of one producing paper with less two sidedness.