On 31st March, 1832, Mr. Kyan patented his process of corrosive sublimate (solution of the bi-chloride of mercury) for preventing dry rot; which process consisted as follows: A solution of the corrosive sublimate is first made, and the timber is placed in the tank. The wood is held down in such a way, that when immersed on the fluid being pumped in, it cannot rise, but is kept under the surface, there being beams to retain it in its place. There it is left for a week, after which the liquor is pumped off, and the wood is removed. This being done, the timber is dried, and said to be prepared. Sir Robert Smirke was one of the first to use timber prepared by Kyan, in some buildings in the Temple, London; and he made some experiments on timber which had undergone Kyan’s process. He says, “I took a certain number of pieces of wood cut from the same log of yellow pine, from poplar, and from the common Scotch fir; these pieces I placed first in a cesspool, into which the waters of the common sewers discharged themselves; they remained there six months; they were then removed from thence, and placed in a hotbed of compost under a garden-frame; they remained there a second six months; they were afterwards put into a flower border, placed half out of the ground, and I gave my gardener directions to water them whenever he watered the flowers; they remained there a similar period of six months. I put them afterwards into a cellar where there was some dampness, and the air completely excluded; they remained there a fourth period of six months, and were afterwards put into a very wet cellar. Those pieces of wood which underwent Kyan’s process are in the same state as when I first had them, and all the others to which the process had not been applied are more or less rotten, and the poplar is wholly destroyed.
“I applied Kyan’s process to yellow Canadian pine about three years ago, and exposed that wood to the severest tests I could apply, and it remains uninjured, when any other timber (oak or Baltic wood) would certainly have decayed if exposed to the same trial, and not prepared in that manner.
“As another example of the effect of the process, I may mention that about two years ago, in a basement story of some chambers in the Temple, London, the wood flooring and the wood lining of the walls were entirely decayed from the dampness of the ground and walls, and to repair it under such circumstances was useless. As I found it extremely difficult to prevent the dampness, I recommended lining the walls and the floor with this prepared wood, which was done; and about six weeks ago I took down part of it to examine whether any of the wood was injured, but it was found in as good a state as when first put up. I did not find the nails more liable to rust.’
“I have used Kyan’s process in a very considerable quantity of paling nearly three years ago; that paling is now in quite as good a state as it was, though it is partly in the ground. It is yellow pine. Some that I put up the year before, without using Kyan’s process (yellow pine), not fixed in the ground, but close upon it, is decayed.”
This evidence, by such an experienced architect as the late Sir Robert Smirke was, is certainly of great value in favour of Kyan’s process.
The recorded evidence upon the efficiency of this mode of treating timber for its preservation is somewhat contradictory. On the Great Western Railway 40,000 loads were prepared, at an expenditure of 1¾ lb. of sublimate to each load, the timber, 7 inch, being immersed for a period of eight days, and the uniformity of the strength of the solution being constantly maintained by pumping. Some samples of this timber, after six years’ use as sleepers on the railway, were found “as sound as on the day on which they were first put down.” This timber was prepared by simple immersion only, without exhaustion or pressure. Some of the sleepers on the London and Birmingham Railway, on the other hand, which had been Kyanized three years only, were found absolutely rotten, and Kyan’s process was there consequently abandoned.
This process is said to cost an additional expense to the owner of from fifteen to twenty shillings per load of timber. Mr. Kyan at first used 1 lb. of the salt in 4 gallons of water, but it was found that the wood absorbed 4 or 5 lb. of this salt per load; more water was added to lessen the expense, until the solution became so weak as in a great measure to lose its effect.
Simple immersion being found imperfect as a means of injecting the sublimate, attempts were afterwards made to improve the efficiency of the solution by forcing it into the wood. Closed tanks were substituted for the open ones, and forcing pumps, &c., were added to the apparatus. The pressure applied equalled 100 lb. on the square inch. With this arrangement a solution was made use of having 1 lb. of the sublimate to 2 gallons of water; and it was found that three-fourths of this quantity sufficed for preparing one load of timber. The timber was afterwards tested, and it was ascertained that the solution had penetrated to the heart of the logs. Mr. Thompson, the Secretary to Kyan’s Company, stated, in March, 1842, that experience had proved “that the strength of the mixture should not be less than 1 lb. of sublimate to 15 gallons of water; and he had never found any well-authenticated instance of timber decaying when it had been properly prepared at that strength.” As much as 1 in 9 was not unfrequently used. Kyan’s process is now but very rarely used; Messrs. Bethell, of King William Street, London, adopt it when requested by their customers. We have given the statements which have been made for and against this patent, but after a lapse of forty years it is difficult to reconcile conflicting statements.
PATENT PRESERVATIVE SYSTEM.
Horizontal Section of Mr. Kyan’s Original Tank and Cistern.