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NET ,' a fabric of thread, cord or wire, the intersections of which are knotted so as toSee also: form a mesh
.
The See also: art of netting is intimately related to See also: weaving, knitting, plaiting and lace-making, from all of which, however, it is distinguished by the knotting of the intersections of the cord
.
It is one of the most See also: ancient and universal of arts, having been practised among the most See also: primitive tribes, to whom the net is of See also: great importance in hunting
and fishing
.
Net-making, as a See also: modern industry, is principally concerned
with the manufacture of the numerous forms of net used in See also: fisheries, but netting is also largely employed for many other purposes, as for catching birds, for the temporary division of See also: fields, for protecting fruit in gardens, for screens and other furniture purposes, for ladies' hair, bags, appliances used in various See also: games, &c
.
Since the early See also: part of the 19th century numerous See also: machines have been invented for netting, and several of these have attained commercial success
.
Fishing nets were formerly made principally from See also: hemp fibre—technically called " twine "; but since the adaptation of machinery to net-making See also: cotton has been increasingly used, such nets being More flexible
and lighter, and more easily handled and stowed
.
The forms of fishing nets vary according to the manner in
which they are intended to See also: act
.
This is either by entangling the See also: fish in their complicated folds, as in the trammel; receiving them into pockets, as in the trawl; suspending them by the See also: body in the meshes, as in the See also: mackerel-net; imprisoning them within their labyrinth-like See also: chambers, as in the stake-net; or See also: drawing them to See also: shore, as in the See also: seine
.
The parts of a net are the See also: head or upper margin, along which the corks are strung upon a rope called the head-rope; the See also: foot is the opposite or See also: lower margin, which carries the foot-rope, on which in many cases leaden plummets are made fast
.
The meshes are the squares composing the net
.
The width of a net is expressed by the See also: term " over "; e.g. a See also: day-net is three fathoms long and one over or wide
.
The See also: lever is the first See also: row of a net
.
There are also accrues, false meshes or quarterings, ,which are loops inserted in any given row, by which the number of meshes is increased . To See also: bread or
breathe a net is to make a net
.
Dead netting is a piece without either accrues or stole (stolen) meshes, which last means that a mesh is taken away by netting into two meshes of the preceding row at once
.
See also: Hand-Netting.—The tools used in hand-netting are the needle, an instrument for holding and netting the material; it is made with an See also: eye E, a See also: tongue T, and a See also: fork F (fig
.
I)
.
The twine is wound on it by being passed alternately between the fork and round the tongue, so that the turns of the See also: string lie parallel to the length of the needle; and are kept on by the tongue and fork
.
A spool or mesh-pin is a piece of round or flat See also: wood on which the loops are formed, the perimeter of the spool determining the See also: size of the loops
.
Each See also: loop contains two sides of the square mesh; therefore, supposing that it be required to make a mesh 1 in. square—that is, measuring 1 in. from knot to knot, —a spool 2 in. in circumference must be used
.
Large meshes may be formed by giving the twine two or more turns round the spool, as occasion may require;'or the spool may be made fiat, and of a sufficient width
.
The method of making the hand-knot in nets known as the fisherman's knot is more easily acquired by example than described in writing
.
Fig
.
2 shows the course of the twine in forming a single knot
..
From the last-formed knot the twine FIG . I . passes over the front of the mesh-pin h, and is caught behind by the little See also: finger of the See also: left hand, forming the loop s, thence it passes to the front and is caught at d by the left thumb, then through the loops s and m as indicated, after which the twine is released by the thumb and the knot is See also: drawn " taut " or tight
.
Fig
.
.3 is a See also: bend knot used for
uniting two ends of twine. a
Machine-Netting.—In 1778 a netting-machine was patented by See also: William
See also: Horton, William See also: Ross, See also: Thomas
See also: Davies and See also: John Golby: In 1802 the French
See also: government offered a See also: reward of 10,000 francs to the See also: person who should invent an autotnatic machine for net-making
.
See also: Jacquard submitted a See also: model of a machine which
was brought under the See also: notice of See also: Napoleon I. and See also: Carnot, and he was summoned to See also: Paris by the emperor who asked—" Are you the See also: man who pretends to do what See also: God Almighty cannot —tie a knot in a stretched string?" Jacquard's model, which is incomplete, was de-posited in the onservatoire See also: des Arts et Metiers; It was awarded. a prize, and he himself received an See also: appointment in the Conservatoire, where he perfected his famous See also: attachment to the com-
mon See also: loom
.
In the See also: United See also: Kingdom, the first FIG
.
2. to succeed in inventing an efficient machine
and in establishing the industry of machine net-making was See also: James Paterson of
See also: Musselburgh
.
Paterson, originally a See also: cooper, served in the army through the
See also: Peninsular War, and was discharged after the See also: battle of See also: Waterloo
.
He established a net factory in Mussel-burgh about 182o; but the early form of machine
was imperfect, the knots it formed slipped readily, and, there being much See also: prejudice against machine nets, the demand was small
.
Walter Ritchie, native of Musselburgh, devised a method for forming the ordinary hand-knot on the machine nets, and the machine, patented in See also: July 1835, became the foundation of an extensive and flourishing industry
.
The Paterson machine is very complex
.
It consists of an arrangement of hooks, needles and sinkers, one of each being required for every mesh FIG . 3. in the breadth being made . The needles hold the meshes, while the hooks seize the lower part of each and twist it into a loop . Through the series of loops so formed aSee also: steel wire is shot, carrying with it twine for the next range of loops
.
This twine the sinkers successively catch and depress sufficiently to form the two sides and loop of the next mesh to be formed
.
The knot formed by threading the loops is now tightened up, the last formed mesh is freed from the sinkers and transferred to the hooks, and the See also: process of looping, threading and knotting thus continues
.
Another form of net-loom, working on a principle distinct; from that of Paterson; was invented and patented in See also: France by Onesiphore Pecqueur in 184o, and again in France and in the United Kingdom in 1849
.
This machine was improved by many subsequent
1 This is a See also: common See also: Tent. word, of which the origin is unknown; it is not to be connected with " knit " or " knot." The term " net," i.e. remaining after all deductions, charges, &c., have been made, as in " net profit," is a variant of " neat," tidy, clean, See also: Lat. nitidus, shining
.
inventors; especially by Baudouin and Jouannin, patented in the
United Kingdom in 1861
.
In this machine See also: separate threads or
cords See also: running longitudinally for
each division of the mesh are em-
ployed (fig
.
4)
.
It will be observed
that the alternate threads a and
b are differently disposed—the a
series being drawn into See also: simple
loops over and through which the
threads of the b series have to pass
.
On the machine the a series of threads are arranged vertically, while the b series are placed hori- zontally in thin lenticular spools . Over the See also: horizontal b series is a
range of hooks equal in number
with the threads, and set so that
they seize the b threads, raise
them, and give them a See also: double
twist, thus forming a row of open
loops
.
The loops are then de-
pressed, and, seizing the vertical a
threads, draw them crotchet-like
through the b loops into loops sufficiently long and open to pass
right over the spools containing the b threads (fig
.
5), after which
it only remains to tighten the threads and
the mesh is See also: complete
.
a Wire-netting, which is in extensive demand for garden use, poultry coops, and numerous like purposes, is also a See also: twisted structure made principally by machine power
.
The industry was mainly founded by See also: Charles
See also: Barnard in 1844, the first netting being made by hand on wooden rollers
.
The first machine appeared in 1855, and,
since that See also: time many devices, generally of extremely complex construction, have come into use
.
The wire chiefly used is common annealed Bessemer or mild steel (see B
.
See also: Smith, Wire, Its Manufacture and Uses, New
See also: York, 1891)
.
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