TAR-ACID RESINS FOR OTHER USES

The application of tar-acid resins in casting, molding, laminating, surface coatings, and adhesives has been described. There are many other uses, but most of them approach the types of application dealt with.

Impregnation of all sorts of materials with tar-acid resins is an increasing use; such applications are in fabrics for aircraft, crease resistant textiles, wood, asbestos, concrete, and electrical coils. Wood with resin forced into the fiber under pressure is used for furniture, flooring, heads for golf clubs, and handles for utensils. Resin is used as a binder in the manufacture of brake linings for automobiles, as well as in the manufacture of abrasive and grinding wheels.

An interesting application is in the construction of corrosion-resistant chemical plant equipment. In 1922 the German firm of Saureschutz Gesellschaft was incorporated to fabricate equipment composed of a special acid-resisting type of phenolic resin and asbestos. Sometime later its manufacture was started in the United States. All sorts of industrial plant equipment is now available, including cylindrical and rectangular tanks up to 9 feet in diameter and 12 feet high, piping for corrosive liquids and gases, valves, pumps, fans and ventilators, filter press plates and frames, buckets, dippers, etc.

Another new use is for making matrices in which to mold rubber printing plates. Such plates are used at present chiefly in printing cotton and paper bags but extensive experimentation promises to broaden their use. The matrix is made of fiber board of very open structure impregnated with tar-acid resin in the process of manufacture.