Sunday 25 November 2012

metal box


Eley Bros. had a cartridge factory at Tile Kiln Lane near Weir Hall by 1865 (fn. 29) and moved to Angel Road in 1903. The old works were sold in 1919 to a motor firm but apparently had disappeared by 1926. 

...

Most factories in Palmers Green, however, were built along the North Circular Road and Green Lanes during the 1920s and 1930s. One of the largest was that of the Metal Box Co., which in 1929 acquired a perfume factory established in 1914 in Blind Lane (Chequers Way). Metal Box started rebuilding in 1934, when Blind Lane disappeared in the North Circular, and had some 900 employees there in 1973.

摘要:449,338. Vacuum closures and lids for boxes &c. BARLOW, R., 28, Kingsway, and STUCHBERY, A. L., Chequers Works, North Circular Road, Palmers Green, both in London. Feb. 5, 1935, No. 3718. [Classes 18 and 125 (iii)] A vacuum closure for a box or like container comprises a slidable lid with packing material 3 between it and the box and arranged so that it is retained with the box after destruction of the vacuum. The packing is seated upon an inward or outward curl 2, or upon an inward or outward flange which may be grooved, formed on the box, and the lid is provided with depending flanges 6 adapted to engage under the curl 2 or with inwardly or outwardly grooved portions of the box. The lid may be cut away at 13 to expose the packing to enable the vacuum to be' readily destroyed, and may be provided with a rib or indentation 14 to facilitate opening by the thumb. Preferably one end flange 11 is formed to limit movement of the lid but the indentation 14 may be adapted for this purpose, or the flanges may be provided with tongues extending across the underside of the box to co-operate with pips therein. The invention is applicable to metal boxes, but the body may be of glass and the lid of metal, or either or both may be moulded from material such as that sold under the Registered Trade Marks " Cellophane " or " Bakelite."
申请人: ROBERT BARLOW ARTHUR LESLIE STUCHBERY
发明(设计)人:
IPC:
ECLA: B65D43/12

http://global.soopat.com/Patent/Patent/GB449338A


Metal box — A history: by W.J. Reader 256 pages, £5.00, 1976, W. Heinemann, London, UK

http://econpapers.repec.org/article/eeejfpoli/v_3a2_3ay_3a1977_3ai_3a2_3ap_3a163-164a.htm

PETER KURTON history for the Palmers Green branch, Curwen Press. about 1976
http://www.flickr.com/photos/69711221@N04/6543873311/

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Metal-Box-Company-Palmers-Green-N21/114155035313898?sk=info


The Book of Dave  By Will Self

http://books.google.com.sa/books?id=nLYPClSaghwC&pg=PT152&lpg=PT152&dq=metal+box+co+palmers+green&source=bl&ots=hoyzf0FyaL&sig=EY4FbQva9xFVj7aeV4Ni1ed3ZIk&hl=en&sa=X&ei=x7uyUJKANYTK0AXdzYG4Dw&ved=0CHcQ6AEwCTgK

http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/+/http://www.competition-commission.org.uk/rep_pub/reports/1970_1975/fulltext/058c02.pdf

http://www.bocn.co.uk/vbforum/threads/72719-No77

http://filestore.nationalarchives.gov.uk/pdfs/small/cab-66-13-wp-40-445-25.pdf

http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/96/a3335096.shtml
http://edithsstreets.blogspot.co.uk/2012/04/pymmes-brook-palmers-green.html

http://www.gracesguide.co.uk/Metal_Box_Co

http://www.palmersgreenn13.com/places-2/roads-a-z/n-to-s/

http://www.bocn.co.uk/vbforum/threads/78620-No-75-Hawkins-Grenade-MK-1


http://www.blancoandbull.com/boot-cleaning/british-forces-dubbin/

http://nostalgie-boris.at/museum/EN/world/England/lone%20star/lonestar1.htm


Die Cast Machine Tools Ltd, also known as DCMT, for its toy products. DCMT started production in 1939 in "The Bridge Garage", Green Lanes, Palmers Green,
 London, 
In 1947 DCMT started producing metal toys in the "River Works", 152 Green Lanes, Palmers Green, London and the founders soon started searching for a brand name that would be
more appealing to the toy market than the name "DCMT" and they decided to use the name "Slikka Playthings" or sometimes "Slikka Toys".

http://www.google.com.sa/imgres?um=1&hl=en&safe=off&sa=N&tbo=d&rlz=1C1SKPC_enGB366&biw=1366&bih=677&tbm=isch&tbnid=aw1kG_MkHnrjSM:&imgrefurl=http://boweslabour.blogspot.com/2011_02_01_archive.html&docid=4fXT4V7SL0ZCgM&imgurl=https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj4JgFY1OSNDzUd5mn2zFEZ-pvCXXhqfjb7xj17gfyrM4_AHH-1fBNDQThVSCqGNyftdpN-Uap6XkYYW0XceJIKizTi6YQch1eeUOopn942m6t0bpfHlq5zPWyZRTm-WlRSmbim-Zw15a9E/s1600/Tile%252BKiln%252Bcleanup%252B12%252BFeb%252B2011%252Bnr%252B4.jpg&w=1600&h=958&ei=K72yUM7PCI210QX7q4DQDg&zoom=1&iact=hc&vpx=207&vpy=135&dur=2828&hovh=174&hovw=290&tx=98&ty=121&sig=112601627085948545877&page=1&tbnh=155&tbnw=246&start=0&ndsp=23&ved=1t:429,r:16,s:0,i:130
http://boweslabour.blogspot.co.uk/

http://www.flickr.com/photos/silverartist/3444624264/ The Metal Box Co. in (Palmers Green) N. London 1974 I have some good memories of this place

Kibility with idardization

:al Box Co., Ltd., rig Long-wheelbase ..apacity Oilers to Highly Complex t Needs with Maxierational Economy

By Alan Smith DIVERSITY seems to exist throughout the products and establishments of the Metal Box Co., Ltd., and highly involved problems face the company's transport executives. A serious attempt is being made to meet the complexities of plant and output by building up a fleet of vehicles which will be both standardized and capable of tackling manifold tasks.
In the early 1920s, the making of metal containers was in the hands of a multiplicity of small family businesses. These firms drew themselves together to pool resources and technical knowledge, and from this alliance the Metal Box Co., Ltd., ultimately emerged in 1930. To-day, the company is probably the biggest single user of steel in this country and makes more than 1,000 m. processed-food cans and many hundreds of millions of other types of container a 'year.
The variety within the concern exists chiefly because of the nature of its foundation. Some of its factories were built years ago and are unsuitable in layout for the application of the latest mechanical-handling devices, but there are also new or modernized plants where the Most up-to-date labour-saving machines are fully exploited.
350 Per Minute
The importance of handling as it bears on transport finds expression when it is stated that one machine making the familiar medium-sized food tin turns out 350 per minute. Smoothly organized transport is essential for the rapid dispatch of products and the provision of storage facilities, except for immediate operational convenience, is obviously inipracticable. In a can-making factory there are many. machines of the type mentioned, each of which makes 4 lorry-load in about two hours.
There are about 30 factories within the organization and production falls into a number of groups. Opentop cans for processed foods form the largest group of bulky items made and six factories at Carlisle, Neath, Perry Wood (Worcester), Portadown (Northern Ireland), Sutton-in-Ashfield, and Acton (London) concentrate on them. Then there is what the company terms "general line production," which covers the output of other types of metal container, such as elaborate chocOlate boxer's, oil cans and -small Containers extruded from aluminium
B8 pellets. The company also manufactures kitchen cabinets, coloured advertisement display panels for shop windows, and toys.
Factories engaged on general line production are at Carlisle, Clydach, Hull, Liverpool, Newcastle-on-Tyne, Portslade, Worcester. Hackney, Palmers Green, and Bermondsey (London). Belying its name, the Metal Box Co., Ltd., also produces paperboard containers such as collapsible I-lb. chocolate cartons, cardboard containers with tinplate ends as with those used for domestic scouring powders, and paper labels. Cork articles, including cap liner discs, are other items.
Paper and cork-product factories are at Alperton,
Manchester, Morton and Southwark, as well as at Carlisle, Newcastle, Palmers Green and Portslade. At its Perivale, Park Royal and Shipley establishments, factory machinery is made to meet 90 per cent, of the whole organizations needs, and part of its demands for tinplate are catered for by its own mill at Neath.
As many of the factories are in and around certain B9
towns, it is possible in many instances to deal with a group of two or three as a managerial, and transport unit: The nature of the •products of sot* 'factories does not call for extensive ancillary transport facilities and the number. of factory groups with C-licensed vehicles in .fleet . strength is eight. The groups are: ActOn, 13 vehicles; Hull, ,S; Liverpool, 15:. Manchester,. 6; Neath, 1.9; 'Perry Wood,. 34; Bermondsey, 12; and Sutton-in-Ashfield, 13. Vehicles based at 11 other towns bring the total fleet strength to 149. In addition, there are about 50 vehicles operated under contract. The fleet is not large in relation to the company's vast output. C-licence vehicles are used only where economically justified. For instance, the Perry Wood factory, which has 27 lorries, would need . some 160 vehicles to convey .alt its products—and one vehicle can carry 25,000 cans.

http://archive.commercialmotor.com/article/11th-january-1952/43/kibility-with-idardization