Difference between revisions of "Drying leather"

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==Glass drying==
 
==Glass drying==
The glass drying process offers the advantage of a smooth leather surface. The moist leather is glued with the [[Leather grain - Grain side|grain side]] to glass plates. This gluing ensures that the leather cannot warp or shrink during drying. For drying, the glass panels with wet leathers on both sides, are introduced into the drying tunnel with controlled temperature and air circulation, and are almost completely dried in a few hours. The importance of this method lies in the short drying time and the smooth leather surface. The drying method is only suitable for certain [[types of leather]].
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The glass drying process offers the advantage of a smooth leather surface. [[Leather grain - Grain side|grain side]] of moist leather is glued  to glass plates. This ensures that the leather cannot warp or shrink during drying. These glass panels with wet leathers on both sides, are introduced into the drying tunnel under controlled temperature and air circulation, and are almost completely dried in a few hours. The importance of this method lies in the short drying time and the smooth leather surface it gives. The drying method is only suitable for certain [[types of leather]].
 
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==High frequency drying==
 
==High frequency drying==

Revision as of 08:38, 19 February 2017

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The drying of leather in the tannery

In the tannery, the leather is dried a maximum of two times between the many working steps. Drying is achieved by various methods: Drying by hanging, drying tunnels, drying machines, high-frequency drying, drying in sun and various other methods.

During drying, different parameters must be taken into account, which determine the drying process to be selected. The time factor plays an important role. However, shorter drying times are associated with higher energy costs. Leather is mostly sold by surface size. Therefore, it is necessary to consider how the type of drying changes the size of the surface. The type of drying also affects the smoothness of the leather.

Mechanical dewatering

To flush water out of drippy, freshly tanned hides, the hides are pressed between two metal cylinders. It is comparable to wringing washed fabrics before hanging them to dry. In this step, the water content is reduced by about 35 to 50%. Special roll-presses are used for this purpose. The rolls are covered with felt in order to prevent the formation of folds during the passage of the leather. This step saves time and energy before complete drying.


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Air-dried hides or skins - ground drying - frame drying

Drying hides by exposing the flesh side to mild rays of the sun is a cheaper method but one that takes substantially longer to dry. The hides can be just put on the floor or they can be tensioned by lacing into a square wooden frame. Stretched hides maintain more surface and shrink less during the drying process when placed in drying frames.

This method has been implemented for centuries by olden cultures like in the Indians where leather was stretched for drying and processing. During this process, holes were punched in the outer edge of the leather and ropes were woven through.


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Leather stretched in drying frames.

Drying by hanging

The leather is dried as smoothly as possible by hanging on hooks or over bars at normal room temperature and increased air movement, if possible. Depending on the type of leather, this can take up to several weeks. It is a suitable method for thin and soft leathers. The deformation of the leather is more, because it is not hindered.


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Hot air drying - Drying tunnels

To dry hides, they are placed on a bed of perforated metal plates and stretched using toggle clips. These plates move through drying tunnels with hot-air circulation. A modern machine dries a hide in a couple of hours. A new development in the drying of furniture leather increases the smoothness and the surface yield of the leather by hydraulically re-tensioning the perforated frames.


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Stretching the hides with toggle clips on perforated metal before drying the leather.

Vacuum drying

Vacuum drying is based on the physical principle that water evaporates at low pressure at low temperature. In the vacuum dryers, leather is placed with the grain side on heated polished metal surfaces and then the water vapor is sucked out of the vacuum chamber. This process has the advantage that the liquid flow goes through the flesh side and draws possible greases from the grain side into the inner zone. The manual work involved is not excessive, as the hides are placed onto the metal plate without clamps or adhesives and the drying time is very short.


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Vacuum dryer in the tannery.


Compared to drying in frames in the drying tunnel, the leather remains very smooth and flat during vacuum drying with the grain side on the metal plates. Another method of smoothing the grain side is by ironing leather. When leather is left to dry by stretching it in frames, the grain is stretched and the pores are more open. Therefore, frame dried leather will never be as smooth as vacuum-dried leather. Frame drying is the right choice if the natural grain optic needs to be strengthened.

Glass drying

The glass drying process offers the advantage of a smooth leather surface. grain side of moist leather is glued to glass plates. This ensures that the leather cannot warp or shrink during drying. These glass panels with wet leathers on both sides, are introduced into the drying tunnel under controlled temperature and air circulation, and are almost completely dried in a few hours. The importance of this method lies in the short drying time and the smooth leather surface it gives. The drying method is only suitable for certain types of leather.

High frequency drying

One method of reducing the water content of the leather to a desired level is provided by high-frequency drying. After dewatering by pressing, the humid leather is brought into an electric field of high frequencies by a belt conveyor system. The energy density in the humid, conductive areas ensures internal heating and evaporation of the water. This type of drying is only used to a limited extent in the leather industry.


Video about leather production


The leather production in a modern tannery.




Process steps in the leather production
storage - soaking - liming - fleshing - splitting - pickling - tanning - neutralising - withering - sorting - shaving - dyeing (through colouring) and fatliquoring - drying - finish - softening - final check


Tanning methods
Chrome tanning - Vegetable-tanned leather - Synthetic tanning - Tanning with fats and oils


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