Aylesford Paper Mills

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  • #297
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

     

     

    Mill Aylesford Paper Mills
    Address New Hythe, Kent,
    Nat Grid Location TQ 712600
    Companies A. E. Reed; Reed International; Aylesford Newsprint; SCA
    English Mill Excise No ND
    Status Shut during 1970 to 2015
    Est. Papermaking Start Date 1922
    Date Closed 2015
    Links
    See Also Aylesford Pictures of East Mill
    Link1 http://www.thelarkfieldsociety.co.uk/
    Link2 http://www.28dayslater.co.uk
    Link3 http://www.kentonline.co.uk/
    Link4 http://www.oblivionstate.com/
    Britain from Above http://www.britainfromabove.org.uk/

     

    • This topic was modified 8 years, 11 months ago by Chris Bennett. Reason: Formatting
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    • This topic was modified 7 years, 4 months ago by Chris Bennett.
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    • This topic was modified 5 years, 4 months ago by Chris Bennett.
    • This topic was modified 5 years, 4 months ago by Chris Bennett.
    #729
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    Photo of visit to West Mill Deinking operation 1979. Courtesy Peter Preston.

    B&W 170 x 213 mm. In picture:

    Peter Preston (West Mill Senior Process Chemist)

    Ron De Gray (General Manager Aylesford Paper Mills)

    John Martin (West Mill Stock Preparation)

    Sir Alex Jarrett (Chairman Reed International)

    Back shows photographer’s stamp, names and date.

    #799
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    Aylesford Site was fairly self contained with Medical Services, Canteens and a bank among many others.

    Details on the bank are given at:

    martinsbank.

    MARTINS BANK LIMITED
    11 83 50 AYLESFORD PAPER MILLS
    BRANCH INFORMATION
    Title: 11 -83-50 Aylesford Paper Mills Type: Sub to 11-83-50 Maidstone
    Address: Aylesford Paper Mills Maidstone Kent
    Index Number and District: 418 London
    Hours: Mon Thu and Fri 12 noon to 2.30pm No Saturday Service
    Telephone: Maidstone 77777 x427 Services: No Nightsafe
    Manager: Mr T J W Ivey Manager (Maidstone)
    BRANCH HISTORY
    1958 opened by Martins Bank Limited
    15 December 1969 7 April 2000 Barclays Bank Limited
    20-54-10 Maidstone High Street
    Currently Closed
    This area has been redeveloped

    #807
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    Memories of Aylesford Paper Mills

    I the spirit of the forum, here are some of my memories of Aylesford in the period 1974-1981 when I worked in the Technical Dept. and in the Production Dept. running the water system. It was a period of financial pressure causing great change: from 9 machines down to 4 and the work-force from 2000 to 900.
    Still it was a great learning experience.

    #849
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    West Mill Boiler House

    In 1980 I presented a paper to a PITA conference entitled “Effluent Treatment in the Real World” for which I used a number of slides.

    Copies here:

    APM Effluent 1980

    • This reply was modified 5 years, 9 months ago by terrywells.
    • This reply was modified 5 years, 4 months ago by Chris Bennett. Reason: Link remade
    #1029
    Artless Bodger
    Participant

    Hello Chris

    Another site you might like to link to is

    https://historicengland.org.uk/images-books/photos/results/?searchType=HE+Archive+New&search=Aylesford+Paper+Mills

    Some of the photos appear to be of Colthrop, not Aylesford site.

    Some captions also appear to be mis-identified too.

    Regards, Artless.

     

    #1035
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    Hi Artless

    Many thanks for the link.

    There are a few video and picture references around the web that I have found. Have put into the two attached files.

    Cheers

    Chris

    • This reply was modified 5 years, 4 months ago by Chris Bennett. Reason: Update of picture links doc
    #1041
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster
    #1044
    Kevin Harrild
    Participant

    Correct, that is the plan of East Mill no’s 5 to 8 machines, the 3 smaller MG cylinder machines and PM6.  No9 machine house at west mill was mirrored contains no’s 9 to 12 machines

    #1049
    Chris Bennett
    Keymaster

    Ah I see.

    I had never considered or even thought about the type of machines that No5 and No7 were. They were just gaps in the machine house.

    I’ll change the document – thanks.

    BTW I found the details about the place of No8 machine in the history of Kimberly Clark in the UK interesting. Part 2 at:

    K-C History

    #1115
    Artless Bodger
    Participant

    I have been spreading bags of manure on the garden this afternoon and the smell reminded me strongly of the island site in summer, especially around by no 4 asp secondary clarifier if sludge had overflowed. This prompted a revisit to this site.

    Regarding the island site and no 4 plant in particular, this was installed to handle the extra effluent when no 2 machine was converted to make fluting (later liner too). The new plant consisted of a prep plant to the east of the existing plants (3, 6A and 6B). The pulper was a side entry agitator Voith type (similar to the phase 2 de-ink plant hydrapulper). I don’t remember too much about the rest of the plant (cleaners etc) but recall the side entry agitators were prone to blocking up if baling wires were not all assiduously removed before bales of waste entered the pulper. No 2 plant was built at a slightly higher elevation than the others so the basement floor was usually dry, it also remained much cleaner that the earlier plants.

    Outside, the effluent plant, comprised a deep sump and adjacent pump pit housing (I think) 3 pumps. The top of the sump was always covered by a thick crust of froth, fibre and plastic – mainly polystyrene packaging. The pumps fed no 4 asp primary clarifier – this was supplied by Portals Water Treatment Ltd (head office in Maidenhead, near my later place of employment). It was unusual in that the sludge extraction pumps were mounted on the rotating scraper bridge with their suction pipes led straight down into the centre anulus of the tank. This at least avoided the long suction  lines found under the base of many of the other clarifiers – very prone to blockage by thick sludge. Water from the primary was fed to the rectangular concrete asp tank (maybe via the concrete lined lagoon – my memory is hazy on this). The asp tank was aerated by two large paddles. Recycled activated sludge was returned via a concrete flume down one side of the tank. After treatment the cloudy water was drawn off to the secondary clarifier, sludge drawn off at low solids by two Archimedean screws and lifted up for either return to the asp or to be mixed with other sludges before dewatering on the Paxman filters (the centrifuges had long gone by my time). The Paxman filters were later replaced by Tassters, after my involvement with the water and effluent plant. The clean water from the secondary clarifier always looked the clearest of the island site, unless the sludge was bulking. Peter West was the mill chemist most involved with the monitoring and control of the island site asps at this time.

    Regarding no 2 machine supply, after the closure of no 6, liner production  was switched to no 2, which used 6B prep plant (with its hot dispersion unit for the liner supply). No 3 plant was shut and 6A supplied no 3 machine. However, I recall that a fractionator was later installed on 6A plant and this perhaps was for liner stock, so I may have the use of 6A and B mixed up. Certainly towards the end of my time (c.1985) the old 3 plant and 2 plant were out of use.

    Of the Paxman filters; there were 5 in all, 1-3 in the ‘Paxman House’ and 4 & 5 in the ‘Centrifuge House’. No 4 was originally belt discharge, the others string discharge, 4 was later converted after a period out of use – iirc the belt was prone to running off and difficult to clean. Dewatered sludge from either building was carried by conveyor to the gap between them, then led out to ‘jet throwers’ high speed conveyor belts with top nip rolls which ejected the sludge cake about 20′ into a partly enclosed area, whence it was shovelled up and loaded into a tip up lorry for dumping at Margett’s Pit (on the edge of the downs near Scarborough Terrace). Seagulls were often attracted to the piles of sludge and remarkably on one occasion I saw one ‘shot down’ as it were by a piece of cake flying from the jet thrower. It did not seem to be harmed however, just stunned and shortly got up and flew off.

     

     

    #1116
    Artless Bodger
    Participant

    I hope these pictures will be of interest to Mike Presneill.

    Photographs of no 2 machine in its last days and being demolished.

    1. 2 mc last days in production. Visible on the right are the vacuum pumps in old 1 mc wire pit / press area. The blue pump and hoses suggest there may have been a problem with the hogpit pump.

    2. Partly dismantled, wet end and vacuum pumps gone, the silo visible in the bottom right hand corner.

    3. Last few cylinders of dryer 3rd section still in place, the hood over the 4th section after dryers still intact. The oily wasteland of the under felt is clearly visible.

    4. All the metalwork has been removed and the concrete is being broken up (I think that basement was filled in and the floor made good so the machine house could be used as a warehouse for a few years). The tunnel along the machine basement is now opened up, compare this with photos during construction in 1921.

    #1118
    Artless Bodger
    Participant

    Photo 2

    #1120
    Artless Bodger
    Participant

    Photo 3

    #1122
    Artless Bodger
    Participant

    Photo 4

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