Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
This book is perhaps better suited to the more experienced knotter.
Two years later the company obtained their first patent - for a knotter to efficiently bind straw.
This employs a flat pan behind the bale knotter.
Just before Coolamon I found a 10 knotter.
A Barber-Colman knotter is a piece of textile machinery used in a weaving shed.
A hydraulically driven knotter blower is available as an optional extra on all MF models.
How else to explain their cunning construction except that the knotter had been at pains to create a problem that was well nigh insoluble?
A Barber-Colman knotter could tie in warp threads to the new beam, much faster than a twister.
In 1900, Colman invented the Hand Knotter, which could quickly and easily tie knots in string.
The knotter takes each new thread and knots it the existing end, which will pull it through the correct healds and reed, saving much time.
There are now two models available, one model comes with a crop cutter, tandem axle and a knotter blower, the other model as a standard machine.
Meanwhile, proud top knotter, Giants defender Tim Mohr, was subbed out with concussion early in the match.
In tolerable Spanish, and with a good-natured, knowing wink, he informed him that the old knotter was simple-witted, but harmless; often playing his old tricks.
While working at a farm in Whitewater, Wisconsin in 1857, John Appleby invented the twine knotter.
At last, puzzled to comprehend the meaning of such a knot, Captain Delano, addressed the knotter:- "What are you knotting there, my man?"
The "Sodbury Sling" was a compromise between ease, aesthetics and technical merit, and was also considered a good judge of a knotter's skill.
Early successes with their Hand Knotter and Warp Tying Machine allowed the company to expand internationally, manufacturing goods in five states and three countries.
HMS Sunfish was a "twenty-seven knotter" torpedo boat destroyer of the British Royal Navy.
The proven knotter design features central lubrication and a superior knotter cleaner which uses compressed to blast debris from the knotters.
It is a small knotter's fid with an added "grip", a hollow shaft that ends near the point with a vee that acts as a jamming cleat.
All "30 knotter" vessels with 4 funnels were classified by the Admiralty as the B class in 1913 to provide some system to the naming of HM destroyers.
HMS Zebra was a "Twenty-seven Knotter" destroyer of the Royal Navy, later classified as part of the A Class.
Another skilled knotter, Claire Zeisler, achieved different effects in "Red Wednesday," from 1967; the crimson cascade of jute and wool fibers ends in a pool-like swirl.
There were various problems with using wire and it was not long before William Deering invented a binder that used twine and a knotter (invented in 1858 by John Appleby).
In 1872 a reaper that used a knotter device to bundle and bind hay was invented by Charles Withington; this was commercialized in 1874 by Cyrus McCormick.