Monotype Chisel Making Fixture

Made:
1937 in Redhill
Chisel  making fixture

Creative Commons LicenseThis image is released under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 Licence

Buy this image as a print 

Buy

License this image for commercial use at Science and Society Picture Library

License

Chisel making fixture
Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Chisel making fixture, Plant No. 2937, made by The Monotype Corporation Ltd., Salfords, Redhill, Surrey, England, 1937. This instrument is part of the equipment used in the production system for 0.2 x 0.2-inch Monotype matrices. Mounted on 10-drawer bench-top chest with machines Nos. 1266 and 1336.

This machine is one of many used in the process to make a 0.2-inch (0.51cm) or 0.4-inch (1.02cm) matrix. Some of the machines were designed at the Monotype factory in Salfords, Surrey, and other machines were purchased and adapted by Monotype.

There were 82 separate processes needed to transform a designer’s drawing of a letter, figure, punctuation or symbol into a piece of Monotype metal type for printing. A pantograph was used to trace and cut the letter from a copper pattern into a piece of steel called a punch. After being hardened, the punch was driven into a piece of bronze using a crank press to produce a matrix. The finished matrix was ready to go to the Monotype Composition Caster where molten metal was pumped through a mould against the matrix to produce a piece of type.

Details

Category:
Printing & Writing
Collection:
Monotype Corporation Collection
Object Number:
1995-1612
Materials:
steel (metal), brass (copper, zinc alloy), leather and aluminium alloy
Measurements:
overall: 160 mm x 100 mm x 230 mm,
overall (bench): 890 mm x 810 mm x 610 mm,
type:
machines