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NAIL (O. Eng. naegal, cf. Dutch, Ger....

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Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 154 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NAIL (O. Eng. naegal, cf. Dutch, Ger., Swed. nagel; the word is also related to
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Lat. unguis, Gr. ovu, Sans. nakhas)
  a word applied both to the horny covering to the upper
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surface of the extremities of the fingers and toes of man and the Quadrumana (see SKIN and DERMAL
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SKELETON), and also to a headed pin or spike of metal, commonly of iron . The
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principal use of nails is in wood-
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work (
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joinery and carpentery), but they are also employed in numerous other trades .
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Size, form of head, nature of point, and
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special uses all give names to different classes of nails . Thus we have tacks, sprigs and brads for very small nails; rose, clasp and clout, according to the form of head; and flat points or sharp points according to the taper of the spike . According to the method of manufacture nails fall into four principal classes: (I) hand-wrought nails; (2) machine-wrought and cut nails; (3) wire or French nails; and (4) cast nails . The nailer handicraft was formerly a
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great industry in the country around
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Birmingham . The nails are forged from nail-rods heated in a small smith's hearth, hammered on an anvil, the nail length cut off on a chisel and the head formed by dropping the spike into a hole in a " bolster " of steel, from which enough of the spike is
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left projecting to form the head . In the case of clasp nails the head is formed with two strokes of the hammer, while rose nails require four . The heads of the larger-sized nails are made with an " oliver " or
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mechanical hammer, and for ornamental or stamped heads " swages " or dies are employed . The conditions of
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life and labour among the hand nailers in England were exceedingly unsatisfactory: married
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women and young children of both sexes working long hours in small filthy sheds attached to their dwellings; their employment was
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con-trolled by
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middle-men or nail-masters, who supplied them with the nail-rods and paid for work done, sometimes in
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money and sometimes in kind on the
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truck
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system . Machine-wrought and cut nails have supplanted most corresponding kinds of hand-made nails . Horse nails are still made by hand-labour .

These are made from the finest

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Swedish
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charcoal iron, hammered out to a sharp point . They must be tough and homogeneous throughout, so that there may be no danger of their breaking over and leaving portions in the hoof . In 1617
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Sir D . Bulmer devised a machine for cutting nail-rods, and in 1790 T . Clifford patented a
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device for shaping the rods, but the credit of perfecting machinery mainly belongs to
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American enterprise (the first American patent appears to be that of Ezekiel Reed, dated 1786) . The machine, fed with heated (to black heat only) strips of metal, usually mild steel, having a breadth and thickness sufficient for the nail to be made,
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shears off by its slicer the " nail blank," which, falling clown, is firmly clutched at the neck till a heading die strikes against its upper end and forms the head, the completed nail passing out through an inclined shoot . In large nails the taper of the shank and point is secured by the sectional form to which the strips are rolled; brads, sprigs and small nails, on the other hand, are cut from
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uniform strips in an angular direction from head to point, the
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strip being turned over after each blank is cut so that the points and heads are taken from opposite sides alternately, and a uniform taper on two opposite sides of the nail, from head to point, is secured . The
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machines turn out nails with wonderful rapidity, varying with the size of the nails produced from about loo to
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i000 per minute . Wire or French nails are made from round wire, which is unwound, straightened, cut into lengths and headed by a machine either by intermittent blows or by pressure, but the pointing is accomplished by the pressure of dies . Cast nails, which are cast in sand moulds by the ordinary
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process, are used principally for horticultural purposes, and the hob-nails or tackets of shoemakers are also cast . See Peter Barlow,
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Encyclopaedia of Arts, Manufactures and Machinery (1848); Bucknall Smith, Wire, Its Manufacture and Uses (New York, 1891) .

End of Article: NAIL (O. Eng. naegal, cf. Dutch, Ger., Swed. nagel; the word is also related to Lat. unguis, Gr. ovu, Sans. nakhas)
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NAIL VIOLIN (Ger..Nagelgeige, Nagelharmonica)

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