Safety Pin
Background
A coiled piece of steel wire, sharpened at one end with a catch plate at
the other, the modern safety pin is a device that can be traced back to
New York City in about 1825. An indebted inventor named Walter Hunt sought
a way to repay a $15 debt. He designed a "safe pin" for
securing clothing, which protected fingers from the sharp end. He patented
the design in 1849 and sold his idea for $400. The design has remained
virtually the same ever since. However, the manufacture of its most common
material, steel, has greatly improved, as has the mechanized process used
in forming the pins. In 1864, E.J. Manville invented an automatic
fourslide machine, which was the forerunner of machines used today.
Even though the current design is a modern one, the safety pin is an
ancient fastener. Coiled bronze pins, embellished with gold and several
inches long, have been found in Egyptian tombs. The Greeks and Romans
called them
fibulae
(Latin for brooch) and used some to fasten garments, while others were
mainly omnamental. Dating from the seventh century
B.C.
, elaborately decorated fibulae often had rows of lions or sphinxes along
the catch plate, either carved in relief or soldered. An Iranian pin from
this period was shaped like a human hand and embellished with two lions
placed head to tail, while an Etruscan fibula from the eighth century was
decorated with ducks. The fibula became widely used throughout the ancient
world as the Roman Empire expanded. In the Middle Ages, the design
reverted to one resembling a straight pin. These were fashioned out of
skewers of wood for common people, or out of bone, ivory, silver, gold, or
brass for those of wealth and high position. In the 15th century, pins
were manufactured from drawn wire, a process that still exists in the
manufacture of modern safety pins. Today the largest user of safety pins
is the retail sewing notions market, while the largest commercial user is
the laundry and cleaning industry.
Raw Materials
The most common metals used in safety pins are spring steel, brass, and
stainless steel. Most fasteners without critical strength requirements are
made from spring steel, an alloy of
iron
that has a high carbon content (more than 0.5%). By varying the
proportion of carbon added to iron, spring steel can have high tensile
strength and resiliency that allows it to flex and return to its original
shape.
Brass is an alloy of approximately two-thirds copper and one-third
zinc.
More expensive than spring steel, this metal will polish up to a high
luster. It is nonmagnetic and easily worked into shape. The strength of
brass is adequate for most safety pin applications.
More expensive than brass, stainless steel is an alloy that includes
chromium and nickel (manganese is sometimes used instead of nickel). With
a mirror-like finish, stainless steel is used when corrosion, temperature,
and strength are considerations. However, for some safety pin
applications, a type of low-carbon stainless steel—ferritic, which
costs less than stainless steel—is used.
Other raw materials include a variety of coatings and platings. The most
common
finish on spring-steel pins is chrome, followed by a final wax coat. If
the pin is to be subjected to damp environments or to a piece of cloth for
a long period of time, other treatments are used to prevent stains from
corrosion of the steel. One of these methods is to coat the pin with the
chemical chromate, particularly on spring-steel safety pins. For brass
safety pins, nickel coatings are used, as they resist some chemicals and
remain attractive for a long period. A more expensive treatment for brass
pins, primarily for decorative purposes, is gilting. By tumbling the pins
in an acid bath, the top layer of brass is removed, revealing a shiny,
goldlike surface.
The Manufacturing
Process
The modern manufacture of safety pins is completely automatic. Specialized
machines have been developed to perform multiple steps, replacing many
workers and increasing the efficiency of the manufacturing process. Over 3
million safety pins can be made by one factory in a day, almost 1 billion
a year. There are only two U.S. companies that make safety pins, although
there are many more companies abroad.
Making the wire
-
1 Steel wire is refined from pig iron, an early stage in iron refining.
The ore at this point still contains many impurities, including carbon,
which makes iron very brittle. In a converter (a high-temperature oven)
oxygen is pumped at high speed into the molten pig iron to burn out the
carbon. The molten steel is then formed into slabs by a method known as
continuous casting. The metal is poured into a mold. Water jets cool the
metal, while straightening rollers
form the mass into a bar called a billet. It is then pickled in acid to
remove oxide scale, passed through rollers, heat treated, and then
cooled slowly, a process known as annealing. The cold metal is then
shaped into wire by drawing it through several dies of decreasing size.
During this stage, the metal undergoes frequent annealing to prevent
brittleness. As it passes through increasingly narrower dies, the wire
achieves the correct gauge (thickness).
Cutting the wire
-
2 At the pin factory, coils of high carbon spring-steel wire are loaded
onto spools and fed into the roll straightener. This machine straightens
and cuts the wire to the correct length, from an inch up to a foot long.
Most cutting machines can be adjusted to accommodate various diameters
of wire.
Forming
-
3 The cut wire pieces are carried by conveyors or by cart to the
grinding machines. The wire pieces are hopper-fed and pressed against
grinding wheels. One end of the wire is ground to a point. It is also in
the grinder that the metal pieces are polished and nicks and burrs
removed from the tapered edges.
-
4 The forming process is done by a fourslide machine, which allows for a
range of motions in four directions. The machine is custom tooled to
form the safety pin. The wire pins are hopper-fed into the machine,
where they are picked up on a chain. They are then coiled around an
arbor, or spindle. The unsharpened end is bent into a hook that will
hold the cap.
-
5 Meanwhile, steel sheets are fed into the machine from the other side.
The sheets of metal are stamped on a die, producing oddly-shaped pieces
that will form the doughnut-shaped cap.
-
6 A stamping operation forms the two-dimensional die-cut steel pieces
into three-dimensional caps.
-
7 Inside the machine, the sharpened, hooked, and coiled wire meets up
with the cap. The cap is then crimped around the hooked end of the wire.
At this point, the safety pin is fully formed and the clasp is closed.
-
8 For those users who purchase the safety pins with the point open and
ready to use, the cost is higher. A mechanical device at the end of the
chains opens the pins, and finishing must be done in smaller batches, as
the pins nest and tangle together.
Finishing and packaging
-
9 The pins are loaded into perforated plastic baskets. If plating is
required, steel pins are generally chromed, while brass pins are nickel
plated. In electroplating, the formed pins are placed into a tank of the
coating solution. The tank is electrically charged, forcing the
chemicals in the solution to adhere to the pins in a fme layer. The
electroplated pins are shaken by the rotating tank to ensure an even
coating.
-
10 The pins are rinsed off with water and then placed in another tank,
where a chemical bath gives them their final polish.
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11 The pins are washed in a detergent solution and given a wax finish.
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12 The formed and finished pins are then packaged. Lots of 10 gross per
box is the standard bulk, or industrial pack. Most consumers purchase
safety pins in retail polybags or blister packs.
The Future
Although more modern fasteners like velcro have been introduced in the
20th century, they have not replaced the safety pin. Its simplicity and
usefulness seem to guarantee its future into the next century. There is
still a large market for safety pins in the less industrialized nations.
In India, for example, pins and sewing needles are kept and used for
generations, passed on from mother to daughter. In an economy such as
this, people do not have easy access to alternative fasteners, and great
value is placed on what many of us perceive as a commodity item.
Where To Learn More
Book
Petroski, Henry.
The Evolution of Useful Things.
Knopf, 1993.
Periodical
Fastening, Joining & Assembly Reference Issue.
Machine Design,
November 13, 1986.
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