UPSETTING MACHINES 上市 Deposited

HOW AND WHY

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 7, Number 46, November 14, 2004, Article 22

    UPSETTING MACHINES: HOW AND WHY

    Dick Johnson writes: "I accept Chris Faulkner's request
    for information on the upsetting machine. We cannot say
    it was invented, it was more like "developed." But we
    do know who should receive credit - Matthew Boulton!
    If there is one person who was responsible for modern
    coins and coining technology it was Matthew Boulton.

    Every numismatist should build a shrine to this one man
    -- we would not have modern coins, or perhaps, modern
    numismatics -- without this manufacturing genius. (I will
    put his picture on my wall next to Leonard Forrer who is
    my hero for compiling a directory of world coin and medal
    artists, what I am trying to do for American artists).
    [And a thank you also, to Dick Doty for his fantastic 1998
    book on Matthew Boulton "The Soho Mint" - Dick, send me
    your picture, I'll put it next to the others!]

    Before Matthew Boulton, coins were essentially struck on
    the manual screw presses. Blanks were fed by hand one at
    a time. I won't say it was a slow process, I was amazed
    to learn they could strike as many as 20 to 30 a minute!,
    as several men swung the arms of the screw press around
    and back while the "coin setter" retrieved the struck coin
    and inserted the next blank. They had great rhythm!

    Boulton took his partner James Watt's invention, the
    steam engine, eliminated the men swinging the arms and
    applied steam power to the screw press. Boulton learned
    of Jean Pierre Droz's (and Gengembre's) invention at the
    Paris Mint of an automatic feed and delivery system which
    could be attached to the screw press. Boulton hired Droz
    in 1790 for his Soho Mint in Birmingham (Droz makes
    improvements, engraved some dies, but returns to France
    nine years later).

    Existing blanks at first jammed the press (imagine those,
    mint error collectors!) They needed blanks in quantity
    that were uniform and perfectly round for automatic feed.
    Cause of the trouble were the burrs around the trailing
    edge of the blank from the blanking die shearing through
    the metal strip.

    At first they hired young Birmingham boys, even 8 to 10
    years old, to put a handful of blanks in a leather bag
    and shake the hell out of the bag. The blanks knocked
    against each other and "deburred" the edges. Remember
    this is the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, so
    they had to find a better IR way. They did this by
    putting more blanks in a barrel and rotated the barrel
    a process similar today called "barrel tumbling"
    which is speeded up by adding steel balls smaller than
    the blanks so they can be sieved out later]. This action
    also deburrs the blanks.

    By 1797 Boulton's team had developed a machine he called
    a "rimmer" " still called that in England today " here in
    the colonies we call it an "upsetting machine." [I like the
    British term better, but rimmer sounds too much like an
    erotic toy for Americans to widely accept the term.]
    Boulton's rimmer did five things: removed the burrs,
    smoothes the edge, rounds the edge, made the blanks
    perfectly round, and thicken the edge.

    Modern upsetting machines still do these five things. Mint
    error collectors call blanks before upsetting "type 1" after
    upsetting "type 2." Type 1 blanks are fed into an upsetting
    machine and they travel in a channel on a spiral track
    through ever smaller and smaller walls which forces the
    blank's diameter to become less and less. The metal at the
    edge builds up on both surfaces, thus making the blank
    thicker around the circumference (ideal for raised rim
    coins!).

    To answer your second question, Chris, who else uses
    upsetting machines? I live near the Naugutuck Valley of
    Connecticut where machine shops and metalworking plants are
    on every block in every industrial area. I should ask some
    of these. But the obvious answers are anything that is
    "coined," that is stuck between dies at room temperature:
    Buttons, small parts, washers, rings, the list is lengthy.
    Some odd shaped parts are coined from round blanks because
    of the ease and speed of striking these, then trimmed to
    shape afterwards.

    I learned of the upsetting machine close up when Medallic
    Art Company bought its first coining press in 1967. We
    bought the press in Germany, but upsetting machines are made
    in England (okay, rimmers!) and we couldn't get one right
    away. My boss, Bill Louth, happened to mention this to Eva
    Adams, then Director of the U.S. Mint. "We got some we're
    not using," she said, "I'll lend you one." Sure enough,
    until a new one came from England, we used a U.S. Mint
    upsetting machine for upsetting blanks to strike medals!
    The first of these were the Illinois Sesquicentennial
    Medal of 1968 in silver dollar size."

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  • 2004-11-14
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