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Tagged: Closed, Deinking, Fine Papers, Water Supply
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22nd October 2019 at 14:12 #935
Chris Bennett
KeymasterMill Forth Mill Also known as Kilbagie Mill Address Kilbagie, Broomknowe, Clackmannanshire, Nat Grid Location NS 927899 Companies J & A Weir; Scottish Pulp and Fibre Co.; Gestetner; Weir Paper Products (Pratt Group); Inversesk; LPC Scottish Mill No 98 Est. Papermaking Start Date 1874 Date Closed Jan 2005 Links Link1 http://canmore.org.uk/site/48118 Link2 http://www.urbexforums.com/showthread.php/7814-Kilbagie-Paper-Mill-Kincardine-March-2010 Link3 BAPH Quarterly News 68 p2,3 Link4 http://www.fourstonespapermill.co.uk/fourstones-managing-director-peter-duxbury-win-paper-industry-gold-medal-award/ Britain from Above http://www.britainfromabove.org.uk/image/spw020289 -
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22nd October 2019 at 14:27 #937Chris Bennett
KeymasterScotland’s Lost Industries By Michael Meighan Originally published: 2012
Displayed on Google Books by permission of Amberley Publishing Limited. Copyright.Kilbagie at Kincardine, also in Fife, is another paper mill that once was a distillery. Founded in 1720 by John Stein, Kilbagie was said to be the largest in Scotland at the time and produced until 1845. Kilbagie was famous as the site of the first continuous still, invented in 1826 by Robert Stein. It went bankrupt, said to be because of excessive customs dues.
After some time as a fertilizer factory, James Weir started the production of esparto-based fine papers in 1875, on machines supplied tothe mill by Bertrams of Sciennes, a 92-inch machine being the largest in the country at the time. In 1941, there were four machines at Kilbagie and they were also producing newsprint.
Gestetner had been a customer and eventually bought the mill in 1965 and then modernised it. Ownership changed to an Australian firm, the Pratt Group of Melbourne, before being taken over by Inveresk in 1995, to produce fine papers.
One commentator has described Inveresk as the undertaker of the Scottish paper industry. Having taken over a number of companies, it shut down mills in Musselburgh; Carrongrove in Denny; Caldwell’s in Inverkeithing; Westfield in Torphichen; and Kilbagie. Inveresk closed Kilbagie in 2001. The plant is now partly a waste management site.Additional information:
Post 2001 the mill was purchased by LPC (Leicester Paper Company) to use the deinking plant to produce wet-lap pulp for their tissue mill in England.
There was a serious mis-match in the type of “deinking” needed. The Inveresk focus was brightness while keeping the filler to improve the yield while for tissue the need was primarily for low ash.
Additional problems were water shortage, see below, and difficulties meeting the environmental requirements of IPPC.
LPC eventually shut their operation in 2005.
22nd October 2019 at 16:07 #938Chris Bennett
KeymasterAlkaline Paper making
Kilbagie Mill (together with Wolvercote Mill) in the late 1970s and early 1980s was in the forefront of replacing rosin size with AKD alkaline size.
This paper A Review of Paper Quality and Paper Chemistry JC Williams
reflects the enthusiam of the Technical Manager, Hugh Bryson:
The major portion of the American paper industry has continued to make rosin-alum-sized acid impermanent paper. European paper- makers, however, have been more responsive. Gestetner Papers Ltd. in Scotland is producing excellent calcium carbonate filled papers. Hugh Bryson, Process and Technical Manager for Gestetner, has been helpful and generous in sharing his experiences:
The considerable upsurge in the last five years of non-rosin derivatives for neutral sizing of paper, coupled with the use of calcium carbonate fillers, has opened a new realm of papermaking. Neutral- sized, calcium-carbonate-loaded papers are now firmly established in the European market, not only, as was originally thought, for specialty lines, but competing successfully in the popular lines of lithography (stationery sizes as well as conventional litho sheets), industrial papers, chart papers, continuous stationery, archive text, photocopying, and coated stock (on machine-blade and off-machine coated). What has the technique of neutral, i.e., non alum-rosin sizing to offer? The answer is very simple, better paper at a lower cost.In a letter, Bryson added: FALL 1981 209
Economics-Brilliant!-and getting better each year as the cost of energy rises, that is in comparison with non-alkaline paper-making. At present, we see a 32% reduction in energy in comparison with acid paper-making. [There is] a reduction in the number of drying cylinders one would normally use for acid paper-making due to the ease of drying the increased carbonate filler one can more readily carry in an alkaline system. The reduction in oil, water and steam makes the picture an even greater financial success, and the big punch line [is] no capital investment to change to neutral sizing and carbonate filled papers. Specia1 equipment-Paper-making-w ise- none; laboratory-wise- nothing that is not normally found in progressive technical laboratories, whether they are acid or alkaline paper mills.
21 Samples of Gestetner paper have been given accelerated aging tests at the Library of Congress Preservation Research and Testing Laboratory and found to have an excellent life span.
It was not as simple as it sounds. Betz UK were the biocide suppliers and struggled to control the microbiology of the new system, despite biocides that were far more toxic than those available now. At one stage they resorted to Acrolein imported specifically from America. The literature often erroneously refers to alkaline mills having fungal problems. This was because, at Kilbagie, the suppliers wrongly identified Sphaerotilus natans as fungi.
8th July 2020 at 12:23 #1050Chris Bennett
KeymasterWater Supply
Water for Forth / Kilbagie Mill was supplied from three boreholes and a small loch in the hills, one Km to the east of the mill.
The artificial loch, called Peppermill Dam, collected run-off from around 3 square Km but was mainly supplied by pumping from Longannet Coal Mine 2 Km to the south. The water from the mine and therefore the dam was very high in iron which was a problem in the mill, especially when they were making fine paper grades with OBA. Treatment of the inlet water was aluminium sulphate and polymer followed by settling.
In March 2002 a severe flooding occurred in the mine and shortly afterwards the mining company went into receivership cutting off any prospect of further water for the mill from that source. As part of the technical support being provided by Quasar Chemicals to the mill, a study of rainfall accumulation was made, with the conclusion that the deinking operation would need to be redesigned to work with the reduced water supply.
Leicester Paper Company shut the mill shortly afterwards.Attachments:
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