Paper manufacture at Kaipola
Kaipola's PK 1 started up in September 1954. For a long time, there were difficulties with the working of the machine and the paper quality did not reach the expected standard. Production improved when the manufacturer of the machine delivered a new headbox in 1956. In the same year, PK 2 also started up, making rolled newsprint. A second supercalender was ordered for the machine in 1959. About 2/3 of Kaipola paper was sold to France, England and West Germany. As demand was high, it was decided to buy a new papermaking machine. Rolled speciality paper
Kaipola aimed to produce speciality papers, to which average newsprint prices would not apply. Customers were found independently, bypassing the sales organisation of Finnpap, the association of Finnish paper mills. One of the major customers was English Associated Newspapers Ltd which used SC paper to print its newspapers and magazines. In the 1970s Kaipola became the flagship of United, also in financial terms. Kaipola mills had experimented with the use of talcum instead of kaolin as the filler material of paper. The results were so positive that the change to the sole use of home-produced talcum in print paper production was made in 1969. Product development of print paper continued under the leadership of Per-Erik Ohls, the mill director. The mill specialised in lightweight printing paper; when the output tonnage could not be increased, due to a shortage of pulp, a larger area was made from the same amount of pulp. Due to the recession the Kaipola machines were also standing idle on occasions in 1975. Improvements were made to PK 1 at the end of the 1970s, but finally, in 1982, the machine stopped as it was unprofitable. The mill's other two 1950s machines, PK 2 and PK 3, were stopped in 1989 and 1988. PK 4 and PK 5 stayed in use. Kaipola had to wait for a new papermaking machine until 1985, when it was decided to build a machine complete with a thermo-mechanical pulper for the manufacture of coated magazine paper. |
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