. Railway mechanical engineer . hed by the Buffalo Forge Com-pany, the bar cutter will take 5-in., beams and 5-in., channels, or any other rolled section having thesame weight and area. One set of blades shears both chan-nels and beams of the same size, a pair of knives beingrequired for each size. This machine has the Buffalo armor plate frame which isguaranteed unbreakable. Bearings are bronze lined. Thedrive shaft runs in oil-ring bearings. The gear and pinionare cut from semi-steel blanks. A feature of the machineis its cast iron base, which makes an expensive concretefoun


. Railway mechanical engineer . hed by the Buffalo Forge Com-pany, the bar cutter will take 5-in., beams and 5-in., channels, or any other rolled section having thesame weight and area. One set of blades shears both chan-nels and beams of the same size, a pair of knives beingrequired for each size. This machine has the Buffalo armor plate frame which isguaranteed unbreakable. Bearings are bronze lined. Thedrive shaft runs in oil-ring bearings. The gear and pinionare cut from semi-steel blanks. A feature of the machineis its cast iron base, which makes an expensive concretefoundation imnecessary. The length of the entire machine is S ft. 4 in., the width2 ft. 8 in. and the height 6 ft. 4 in. The total weight lb. -Approximately 3 hp. is required to operate themachine at capacit>-. In railroad blacksmith and boilershops especially, the new Buffalo universal slitting shear and bar cutter should prove a valuable machine for saving timeand expediting the work of these two important Buffalo Universal Slitting Shear and Bar Cutter for Railroad Shops Chain Screen Doors for Boilers and Furnaces RKCENT developments in Wiegand chain screen doors,made by the E. J. Codd Company, Baltimore, Md., in-dicate that this device is of especial value in increasingthe efficiency of furnace operation. The principal advantages


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectrailroadengineering