The Third Process.—This process is suitable for either harness or dressing hides, and differs from the above-described process only in the fact that instead of bating the hides in pits, a latticed drum is used in order to keep the hides in constant motion. This consists of a large pit, in which a latticed drum revolves two-thirds immersed in the liquor. The bate liquor is made up as usual, and the temperature of the liquor raised to 75° or 80° F.; the hides are then placed in the latticed drum, which revolves at from four to six revolutions per minute, and, if the goods are put in the drum in the morning, and if the temperature is kept at about 70° F., the hides are generally sufficiently bated by evening. They may then be taken out of the drum, scudded, and left suspended in boracic acid overnight, and can then be taken to the liquor next morning.
Where there is considerable motion, even the heaviest hides will stand a temperature of 75°, and even 80°. Some tanners who use the latticed drum method, do not place their hides in the drum until the afternoon; they are drummed for about an hour in the cold bate, and left overnight; next morning the temperature of the bate is raised to 75°, and the drum started; they are then removed from the drum towards the afternoon, when sufficiently “down” to admit of them passing forward into the next process.
The above are three typical methods in common use in England, but many modifications of these processes exist. Everything depends upon the amount of lime in the hide, on the number of haulings or handlings given to the goods, and the temperature or the conditions under which the hides are bated, so that no hard-and-fast lines can be laid down. Much also depends upon the method of liming used, prior to the bating. It must be borne in mind that the bating of hides, and even of kips, differs materially from the bating of goat and sheep skins, as one has to deal with double or even treble the substance. If the bate is worked at a temperature of even 70° or 75°, there is the danger of the grain being seriously affected before the bate has penetrated to the interior of the pelt, unless the goods are kept in constant motion.
Instead of a latticed drum, large paddles are used in some factories. If the pit is large enough the paddle causes both hides and liquor to revolve, and thus gives the required movement necessary for a regular and even “bating effect” to be obtained.
CHAPTER II.
THE CHEMISTRY OF BATING.
“And now, as we cannot understand the frame of a Watch, without taking it into pieces; so neither can Nature be well known, without a resolution of it into its beginnings, which certainly may be best of all done by Chymical Methods”—Jos. Glanvill, 1668.
Professor H. R. Procter, in his “Principles of Leather Manufacture,” 1903, p. 153, has given a very complete account of chemical deliming, and also of the bating and puering processes. Meunier and Vaney, “La Tannerie,” 1903, give a general review of our knowledge of these processes up to that date. These accounts are extremely useful, but treat the subject in a general manner.