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- Blistering or cockling
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- Breaks, dryer section
- Build-up on dryers
- Curl in paper
- Cutting in dryers
- Dimensional stability
- Dryer area defects
- Dryer felts
- Dryer temperature control
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- Evaporation rate, maintaining
- Felt tension control
- Hot dryer bearings
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- Over-drying
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- Uneven drying
- Air in the system
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- Crush
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- Drainage varying
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- Pinholes, reducing
- Sheet sealing
- Stock jumping
- Stock skating on wire
- Stock sticking to wire
- Strings, elimination
- Watermarking with ring
- Wet/dry line moving
- Wire marks
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- Breaks, press section
- Bulk improvement
- Crushing, press
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- Moisture profile
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- Pickup problems
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- Shadow marking
- Sheet blowing, press nips
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- Sheet following top press rolls
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- Vibration at press
- Water removal (CD)
- Water removal, wet press
- Wrinkles, press section
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- Annular rings
- Baggy rolls
- Bursting or cracked rolls
- Cleaner slitting
- Corrugations
- Corrugations, winders
- Defective splices
- Dust in rolls
- Dust in the rolls
- Good roll condition, off winder
- Hard and soft spots/ridges
- Interweaving
- Loose cores
- Loose paper, in roll
- Nicked edges
- Out-of-round rolls
- Reel or roll quality
- Rewound roll quality
- Run-in of slit rolls
- Shipping roll characteristics
- Snap-offs
- Soft edges
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- Telescoping
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- Winder cracks
- Winding requirements
- Wrinkles, winder
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Water flow to headbox, excess
1. Consistency of the stock in the headbox is of utmost importance. When water flow is either greater than that which gives the critical velocity in the headbox (avoiding flocculation), or is greater than that which can be drained effectively, then it is excessive.
2. If the slice is not properly adjusted, formation will be impaired because the excess water flow will give too high a head with too fast a jet speed for the wire speed.
3. With a poorly designed distribution system, it is possible to have very heavy channeling in the headbox.
— if the flow is greater than needed, the tendency to channel is accentuated and will give streaks.
— channeling, in certain cases (e.g., cross flow distributor), contributes to skating on the forming fabric.
— channeling is greatly aggravated if the filler level is high in the headbox stock.
4. If there is too much water on the forming fabric for the drainage elements to handle, a rough, wormy, or patchy sheet will result.
5. If the sheet skates on the forming fabric, the basis weight across the machine will vary in an irregular manner that cannot be corrected at the slice.
— excess water will aggravate basis weight variation under such conditions.
6. By skillful use of an on-machine traversing beta gauge, these points can be traced and the best operating conditions found for each grade.